REDUCING RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE IN WASHINGTON STATE RESULTS FROM THE 2016-2020 STUDY ldquoUNDERSTANDING AND REPLICATING WASHINGTON STATErsquoS SEGREGATION REDUCTION PROGRAMSrdquo CONTRACT NO K11273
Keramet Reiter JD PhD
With Kelsie Chesnut PhD Gabriela Gonzalez MA Justin Strong MA Rebecca Tublitz MPP Dallas Augustine MA Melissa Barragan PhD Pasha Dashtgard MA Natalie Pifer JD PhD
2021
The findings opinions conclusions and recommendations expressed in this report are those of the authors and do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Washington Department of Corrections nor the Langeloth Foundation
which supported this research The authors thank the Washington Department of Corrections especially Secretary
Sinclair and former secretaries Warner Pacholke Morgan Becker-Green and Vail the Washington Department of
Research including Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry and Kevin Walker and finally Tim Thrasher who
served as the DOC project contact and coordinator throughout David Lovell served as a project consultant and led
the quantitative data analysis piece of this project Joseph Ventura trained the team and consulted on BPRS
assessments and Lorna Rhodes served as an project adviser in the early stages of planning The authors are
especially grateful to those prisoners and staff who participated in interviews and thank them for generously
sharing their experiences and insights without which this report would not have been possible
1
TABLE OF CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4
(1) RESEARCH PRACTICES 4
(2) PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE 5
(3) CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING 5
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING 6
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING 6
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS 7
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT 9
METHODS 10
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION 11
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION 13
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION 14
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS 18
FINDINGS 19
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE 19
Fluctuations in Populations and Lengths of Stay in IMUs 20
Racial disproportionalities 23
Behavioral Profiles Gang Affiliation and Serious Infractions 26
Existing Policy Reform Supports Further Restrictive Housing Reductions 28
IMPACTS ON STAFF 31
Appreciation for IMU Staff Culture 32
Negative Effects on Staff of IMU Work 33
Staff Desire for Policy Input 35
Staff Objections to IMU R eforms 37
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS 40
Trusting Staff to Be Responsive 40
Programs Access Challenges and Unrealized Potential 41
2
Social Contact Policies 43
Health 46
Long-Term Management Challenges in the IMU 50
Re-Entry 51
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021 55
APPENDICES 58
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL 58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020 59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE 60
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE 9 1
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE 112
3
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This report represents the culmination of a four-year-long collaboration between the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) and Keramet Reiter as Principal Investigator
based at the University of California Irvine (UCI) The Langeloth Foundation funded the
research and the Washington Department of Corrections and its Office of Research along with
Tim Thrasher Mission Housing Administrator facilitated both data sharing and collection at
every step One central research question guided our work How and with what effects has Washington DOC reduced its reliance on restrictive housing
To answer this question the UCI team collected and analyzed administrative data describing
the entire DOC population at six snapshot intervals between 2002 and 2017 315 paper surveys
of prisoners and staff in Intensive Management Units (IMUs) 186 interviews (ranging between
45 minutes and three hours in length) with a random sample of prisoners on maximum custody
status in IMUs and 77 interviews (of similar durations as the prisoner interviews) with a
strategic convenience sample of staff in IMUs
In this executive summary we highlight our major findings in five key areas (1) research
practices (2) patterns in restrictive housing use in the 2000s (3) conditions in restrictive
housing (4) staff and (5) prisoner experiences And we provide a series of brief
recommendations following closely from these findings In the full report we discuss the
research protocols findings and recommendations in more detail
(1) RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Washington DOCrsquos commitment to collecting relevant data and sharing that data with
researchers is integral to its reform agenda
bull The unprecedented scope and scale of data collected and analyzed in this project
demonstrates the feasibility of sustained researcher-practitioner collaborations working towards improved prison practices
bull Over hundreds of hours on site conducting surveys and interviews (under Mission
Housing Administrator Tim Thrasherrsquos expert coordination) our research team
efficiently accomplished our target goals for data collection and felt safe throughout
4
(2) PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull DOC has implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals (1) reducing the
number of people in restrictive housing (2) reducing the length of time individuals spend
in restrictive housing and (3) mitigating the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive
housing Over the 2010s DOC has indeed made improvements in all three areas
bull The number of people on maximum custody status in IMUs across the state has
fluctuated from a low of 149 (in 2002) to a peak of 472 (in 2011) By 2014 reforms had
cut this peak population nearly in half to 283 But the population increased again by
more than 20 percent over the next three years rising back to 342 in 2017
bull While IMU populations have fluctuated mean lengths of stay in IMUs (for those at all
custody statuses) have decreased steadily since 2011 maximum custody prisoners now
spend an average of 214 days in IMUs 133 days less than in 2011
bull Although mean lengths of stay in the IMU fell significantly after 2011 an increasing proportion of people experience IMU confinement across snapshots and cumulative
time spent in the IMU increased steadily between 2002 and 2017
bull Both Hispanic prisoners and Hispanic-affiliated gang members are increasingly over-represented in the max custody-IMU population relative to their representation in the
general prison population over the 2002-2017 period
(3) CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull The IMUs function with less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than they did two decades ago as described by staff and seen in comparison with data
Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago
bull Access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of programming has increased
bull People are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons and receive regular
individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement
bull Those prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods represent
substantial management challenges (eg histories of repeated attacks on staff or of
serious mental illness) Washington DOC officials are national leaders in piloting
alternatives
5
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Staff participated eagerly and thoughtfully in interviews and repeatedly expressed
gratitude for the opportunity to both have a voice in policy evaluations and reflect on the intensity of their work in the IMU
bull IMU Staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their
colleagues and with immediate supervisors nearly 90 percent of correctional officers
surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unitrdquo for instance
bull Although staff felt safe working in the IMU they overwhelmingly felt hypervigilant (often even unsafe) outside of prison suggesting that their work in the IMU had health
and social consequences outside of the IMU
bull Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them from
ldquoheadquartersrdquo they desired more opportunities for input into policymaking
especially around safety and security needs and risks
bull Staff described specific objections to reforms (1) prioritization of prisoner well-being
over staff well-being (2) violation of mandates to be fair and consistent through
individualized accommodations and treatment plans for prisoners and (3) imposition of
extra burdens on staff (especially around additional movement of prisoners into more
programs) causing stress about fulfilling obligations and anxieties about safety
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food and care and
perceived staff as responsive to requests kites and grievances
bull Prisoners consistently expressed frustration with the long waitlists for classes and
programs waitlists which extended the durations of their IMU placements
bull Prisoners appreciated the good-faith efforts being made around programming in the
IMU but found many of the programs to be repetitive futile and not tailored to their
specific challenges and needs
bull Prisoners found social contact policies (who could visit) and practical barriers (phone
access and geographic distance) in the IMU frustrating and harmful to their well-being
6
bull Prisoners in the IMU frequently experienced clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety and guilt serious mental illness and self-harming behavior IMU-
induced symptoms of social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity
skin irritations and weight fluctuations un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
and musculoskeletal pain
bull Prisoners in the IMU were often just trying to make it through but upon release back
into the general prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and
physical challenges experienced while in the IMU
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Maintain long-standing commitment to systematically collecting robust data about
DOC policy and practice and collaboratively sharing and analyzing this data with
external independent researchers
PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull Continue to carefully track all forms of restrictive housing use including number of
people confined rates of confinement average and cumulative lengths of stay and
the over-representation of Hispanic prisoners
bull Continue work to reduce overall restrictive housing populations but also the
frequency with which people experience these conditions lengths of stay in these
conditions and disparate impact of these conditions on Hispanic prisoners
bull The racial disproportionality in IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories and suggests an
area ripe for further policy attention
CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Continue work to mitigate the harms of restrictive housing including provision of
counseling healthcare group activities and programs and individualized
assessments of placement decisions
7
STAFF EXPERIENCES
bull Seek out and integrate IMU staff perspectives into reform initiatives
bull Provide regular opportunities for staff to reflect on the challenges of work in the
IMU (with supervisors counselors and researchers)
bull Develop resources to address the unique stress of being hypervigilant outside of the
IMU
PRISONER EXPERIENCES
bull Shorten wait times to participate in IMU programs
bull Leverage existing programming infrastructure (personnel classrooms) to develop
more substantively useful content for IMU prisoners
bull Continue to develop and support social contact for IMU prisoners
bull Address and mitigate the ongoing physical and mental harms associated with IMU
placements especially by reducing barriers to accessing healthcare and improving
the quality of treatment
COMMITMENT TO REFORM
bull Maintain the Mission Housing Administrator position which is focused on
implementing restrictive housing reform
bull Consider implementing similar ldquomission housingrdquo positions at the institutional level
to facilitate ongoing individualized attention to address the intersection of health
and behavioral challenges among the highest security prisoners in the most
restrictive conditions of confinement
bull Develop state-level agreements to permit transfer of seriously mentally ill prisoners
from custody-oriented facilities to healthcare-oriented facilities
8
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT
The project at the broadest level sought to understand Washington Statersquos widely touted
reduction in solitary confinement use at both the level of quantitative administrative data and
at the level of lived experience for prisoners and staff The core claim in 2013 Washington had
reduced their solitary confinement population by more than half and implemented additional
reforms to shorten terms in segregation refocus on rehabilitation reframe responses to self-
harming prisoners and systematically intervene in prison-based violence through programs like
Operation Place Safety1 We started this project with two key questions
(1) What policies has Washington State implemented to reduce its reliance on restrictive
housing
(2) What are the impacts ndash on both prisoners and staff ndash of Washington statersquos restrictive
housing reduction program
To answer these questions we
bull Analyzed 15 years of administrative data six record sets of the entire DOC population
on evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and 2017)
including subject-level demographic records (N=57130) event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments
(12 million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million)
bull Administered paper surveys to prisoners on maximum custody status living in and staff
working in IMUs totaling 225 paper surveys collected from prisoners and 90 from
custody and non-custody staff
bull Conducted in-depth qualitative interviews (1) 106 interviews with a random sample of
maximum custody prisoners housed across all five of DOCrsquos IMUs in the summer of
2017 (2) 80 one-year follow-up interviews with 2017 participants still incarcerated in
the summer of 2018 (3) 77 interviews with a strategic convenience sample of custody
and non-custody staff working in and supervising IMUs in the summer of 2017
1 See Bernie Warner Dan Pacholke and Carly Kujath Operation Place Safety First Year in Review Jun 1 2014 (Washington State Department of Corrections) available online at httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
9
bull Collected DOC policies and reports about restrictive housing reform in the 2000s
conducted dozens of informal conversations with former DOC leadership to identify
policy changes and goals and observed multiple classification committee meetings
during visits to Washington state to administer surveys and conduct interviews
During both our survey administration and qualitative interview data collection phases we
worked with the Mission Housing Administrator to bring 8-9 research staff on site over multiple
days at each IMU in the state in 2017 and then at each prison housing year-one research
participants in 2018 At each institution staff worked with each other and the Mission Housing
Administrator to figure out how to move prisoners into secure interview rooms on and off
IMUs The cooperation was phenomenal and across hundreds of hours of interviews our
research staff uniformly felt comfortable and safe This project unprecedented in
While this report reviews in great detail preliminary scope and scale relied on findings from analyses of both interviews and Washington State DOCrsquos administrative data a broader implication of this partnership commitment to
extended partnership deserves acknowledging at the transparency and vision for reform
outset What Washington leadership at headquarters
and in the Research Department facilitated with this project is unprecedented in scope and
scale in prison research in the United States In facilitating this work Washington DOC has first
extended and amplified its reputation as a sought-after partner in research-practitioner
collaborations building on the collaborations between DOC and the University of Washington
in the late 1990s and early 2000s around mental health and solitary confinement And
Washington DOC has second proven that research like this is eminently possible The critical
insights here would not have been possible to discern without the bigger picture investments in
transparency and improvement to which Washington DOC is committed While prisoners staff
and administrative data itself point the way to possible policy recommendations to improve the
operation of Washington prisons these insights are all-the-more-important for other prison
systems which provide less room for analytic insights but offer more room for improvement
METHODS
This study sought to systematically evaluate Washington DOCrsquos use of long-term isolation over
time through rigorous application of mixed methods Comprehensive research studies about
restrictive housing use over more than a few years in any given state are rare and analyses
incorporating qualitative interviews with prisoners and staff are rarer still Only a few studies
exist of specific ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities one of these conducted in the Washington DOC was
10
completed more than 10 years ago2 A few additional studies have sought to analyze statistics
about durations of confinement racial impacts of isolation violence in isolation and recidivism
rates post-release from isolation in several different states3 This study then breaks new
ground for researchers and policymakers alike For this reason we share here a detailed
description of our methods in hopes that this research will serve as a model for both future
studies and ongoing researcher-practitioner collaborations
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION
At the center of our quantitative data analysis is a longitudinal administrative record set of the
entire DOC population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011
2014 and 2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12
million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) The scale and scope of
this data permitted our research team to independently develop measures of critical
independent variables like criminal history as well as of key dependent variables of interest
like rates of restrictive housing use Specifically this data set included the entire prison
conviction history for all 57000 prisoners in subject population permitting our research team
to independently identify the most serious current offense and to provide a consistent measure
of prisonersrsquo criminal histories in our analyses And this data set included not just prisoners in
some form of restrictive housing but the entire prison
population on each given snapshot date allowing us to
independently define and operationalize restrictive
housing use
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying
uniform coding procedures to compile event-level data
Quantitative Data bull 15 years 6 snapshot
intervals 2002-2017 bull 57130 subject-level records bull 24 million inter-facility
movements
2 Lorna Rhodes Total Confinement Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004) Sharon Shalev Supermax Controlling risk through solitary confinement (Portland OR Willan Publishing 2009) Keramet Reiter 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016)
3 See eg CS Briggs JL Sundt and TC Castellano ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 (2003) 1341-1376 David Lovell Kristin Cloyes David G Allen amp Lorna A Rhodes ldquoWho Lives in Supermaximum Custody A Washington State Studyrdquo Federal Probation Vol 642 (Dec 2000) 33-38 Daniel P Mears amp William D Bales ldquoSupermax Incarceration and Recidivismrdquo Criminology Vol 474 (2009) 1131-65 Keramet Reiter ldquoParole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007rdquo Punishment amp Society Vol 145 530-63 (Dec 2012)
11
into a subject-level dataset We computed the housing location and custody status of every
prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at each location and
subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as infractions
Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and plausible counts
and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all prisoners in six
snapshot cohorts We also used inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-tests) to test for
differences across cohorts and groups
We measured restrictive housing use by examining the intersection of custody status and
location identifying all prisoners assigned to maximum custody status (the highest level of
custody classification in DOC) all prisoners housed in Intensive Management Units (the most
secure housing units in DOC) and focusing in particular on individuals at the intersection of
this status and location Appendix A includes a matrix detailing more specifically how we
operationalized and measured restrictive housing use in DOC In a meeting with Research
Department Staff on December 7 2020 we confirmed this operationalization was consistent
with how DOC research staff are measuring restrictive housing use in DOC currently
Our operationalization of restrictive housing potentially undercounts one category of individual
in restrictive housing those who are neither assigned a maximum custody status nor housed in
an IMU but are nonetheless in some form of segregation (likely administrative or disciplinary)
Our analysis of prisonersrsquo confinement status used movement records to distinguish periods in
IMU from time spent either in other specialized facilities or in the general prison population
(ldquogeneral populationrdquo) but excluded within facility movements from one bed or cell to another
(likely 50 million in number for our subjects) A prisoner placed in segregation prior to transfer
to an IMU or assignment of maximum custody status would not be captured in our counts
Since 2015 the Research Department has had a flag in OMNI for ldquoad seg statusrdquo which allows
them to better capture this population that we do not observe this flag was not present in the
data obtained from DOC and no such flag exists for the pre-2015 data we analyze
In order to better account for the variation in both restrictive housing capacity and
characteristics over the entire fifteen years of our data set we worked closely with Kevin
Walker and Tim Thrasher to identify both (1) IMU capacity and (2) restrictive housing capacity
within non-IMU facilities over the entire 15-year-period of our study Appendix B includes a
table with our estimates of these capacities
We also systematically collected and categorized restrictive-housing oriented policy reforms
and reports between 2011 and 2017 peak periods of reform and focus of this study
12
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
Survey Data bull 225 prisoner surveys
(response rate 62) bull 90 staff surveys
(response rate na)
Prisoner surveys included 36 numbered questions Each contained a combination of yesno
ordinal bubble options and short answer sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to
explain or elaborate on their answers Topics included experiences in IMUs conditions of
confinement health and well-being and demographic background many questions were
drawn from existing studies on prisons and prisoner
experiences4 In all there were 89 substantive items on the
survey (excluding demographic questions) coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU)
ordinal (eg daily weekly monthly describing frequency of
interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) variables
Staff surveys included 70 numbered questions Most questions were yesno or multiple choice
but there were also some open-ended probing questions Topics included corrections
employment history job responsibilities experience working in the IMU beliefs regarding
restrictive housing attitudes towards coworkers and supervisors opinions regarding restrictive
housing reforms feelings of safety health and well-being and demographic information Many
questions were drawn from existing studies with correctional staff5
Between February and April 2017 PI Reiter and Project Manager Chesnut conducted two
separate trips to collect survey data from prisoners and staff across all five of the IMUs in DOC
Surveys were piloted at MCC in February 2017 to allow for slight revisions of any confusing text
in the instrument Surveys were distributed to prisoners and staff in IMUs at the remaining four
facilities (CBCC SCCC WCC and WSP) at the end of March and beginning of April 2017 At each
site Reiter and Chesnut first spoke individually to each maximum custody status IMU prisoner
at cell-front accompanied by Mission Housing Administrator Thrasher We explained survey
participation was optional and that all data would be anonymized and answered any questions
about the research project For security reasons only paper-and-pen surveys were offered to
4 For studies from which relevant questions were drawn see Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates (Santa Monica CA The Rand Corporation 1982 Report No N-1635-NIJ) Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014) Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J ldquoTheoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation and normalization in Danish prisonsrdquo Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
5 See eg J Sundt ldquoThe Effect of Administrative Segregation on Prison Order and Organizational Culturerdquo in Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and Future Directions NCJ 250323 (Washington DC US Department of Justice National Institute of Justice 2016)
13
the maximum custody prisoner population surveys were distributed first thing in the morning
and collected a few hours later by Reiter and Chesnut We also provided stamped self-
addressed envelopes upon request for those participants who wanted additional time In total
we distributed surveys to all 363 prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU in spring of
2017 prisoners returned 225 surveys for a response rate of 62
Following survey distribution to the prisoners we held an informal question-and-answer
session with custody staff on the unit to introduce ourselves and the research project Staff
like prisoners were informed that the survey was optional anonymized and only aggregated
results would be shared with DOC We then distributed paper surveys to custody and non-
custody staff working in each IMU We encouraged staff to return the surveys to us before we
left each facility but we also provided staff with self-addressed stamped envelopes upon
request For staff we also shared digital copies of the survey through e-mail following each site
visit We also made a special effort to seek out non-custody staff working in the IMU such as
medical staff mental health workers classification counselors and program facilitators In
order to be as inclusive as possible we repeated this process again in the afternoon following
shift change and left copies of the surveys with self-addressed stamped envelopes for the
graveyard shift In all staff returned 90 surveys Calculating a response rate for this strategic
convenience sample is not possible because we sought to reach staff across all three shifts
included non-custody staff like nurses and educators who sometimes work across units and
distributed surveys in person and via e-mail
The surveys served a dual purpose in the research project First they provided a baseline
understanding of the challenges of living and working in Washington IMUs as well as of the
attitudes towards recent reforms which was critical to the research team as we developed
interview instruments and conducted interviews Second they gave the research team an
opportunity to introduce the research project to prisoners and staff laying the groundwork for
interview participation in subsequent months
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
The qualitative prisoner interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured
questions Questions included a combination of yesno options and probing open-ended
follow-ups Topics included conditions of daily life (prior to and during isolation) perceived
state of physical and mental health access to medical treatment and experiences with
required programming in the IMU Where possible included questions replicated those asked
in existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences Fourteen of the questions making up
the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) a standardized scale used to identify indicators of
serious mental illness were embedded within the interview instrument In total 40 of the
14
substantive items on the interview instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 14
embedded questions designed to establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg How much does it cost Interview Instruments to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have bull Questions about conditions you noticed any changes in your health since you health programming reforms have been in this IMU) variables Such questions demographics always included open-ended follow-up questions bull Embedded Brief Psychiatric (eg Can you describe those changes) We first used Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment the interview instrument at the smallest IMU in for prisoners Washington interviewing 15 prisoners We then
revised both the wording and ordering of questions for maximum clarity and engagement in the
remaining 91 interviews we conducted across the four other IMUs in the state
The condensed year-two instrument contained approximately 70 questions The questions
largely replicated the year-one questions ndash but excluded the questions about background
demographic and experiences over time in prison and adjusted some other questions to
address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status As part of both initial and
follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psychological assessment both
during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following (for the 10 observational
items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech) interviews For the 14 self-
report questions embedded in the interview guide interviewers asked about the presence of
symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard Importantly this means that BPRS scores
certainly undercount symptoms experienced intermittently or outside of that two-week time
window
The qualitative staff interview instrument consisted of 87 numbered semi-structured questions
As with the prisoner interview instrument these questions included a combination of yesno
questions and probing open-ended follow-up questions Topics included IMU policies job
responsibilities personal safety health relationships with coworkers and supervisors
restrictive housing reforms and demographic information
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and to develop the interview
instruments Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol
for administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment
training sessions in year one with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Ventura and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Using a set of seven standardized
BPRS training videos of patient interviews the research team viewed and rated each video and
15
discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for
interrater reliability Dr Ventura conducted an interrater reliability analysis and confirmed that
trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years
2017 and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment
team when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the
standard training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings In addition to
ensure appropriate administration of the BPRS in a prison setting Dr Ventura accompanied the
research team on the first leg of the first visit to MCC in year one Dr Ventura co-conducted
interviews with several team members and was available to clarify questions throughout the
length of the trip In sum this extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members
over the two years (9 women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral
students (9) with expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement
settings identified and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being
studied and minimized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application
of questions and assessments
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that
all information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To identify potential participants the Mission Housing Administrator
provided a list of all prisoners on maximum custody status at a given IMU a day or two prior to
the research teamrsquos visit to that IMU Chesnut then randomized that list of prisoners in order
to identify a list and order of potential research participants (with the target goal of
interviewing roughly one-third of maximum custody status prisoners in each IMU) To recruit
participants a research team member approached potential participants at cell-front
explained the study and noted whether the prisoner would be interested in participating
Willing prisoners were escorted one-by-one to a confidential area (monitored visually but not
aurally by DOC staff) consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research
team In all 106 prisoners participated in interviews 39 percent of the prisoners approached
for participation refused comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people6 Interviews
ranged in length from 45 minutes to 3 hours
6 D Lovell ldquoPatterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prisonrdquo Criminal Justice amp Behavior Vol 358 985ndash1004 (2008) M Berzofsky amp S Zimmer National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recommendations
16
Immediately following year-one interviews interviewers asked participants whether they
consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to participating in one-year
follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all but two (n = 104)
consented in writing to medical file reviews At Interviews Completed the conclusion of each prisoner interview in both bull Random sample of prisoners year year one and year two interviewers completed one 106 ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items Following bull Follow-up prisoner interviews interviews interviewers reviewed consenting year two 80 participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of bull Strategic convenience sample of diagnoses prescriptions and substance abuse staff year one 77 status DOC additionally provided electronic
administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as
comparable population-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
In year two the UCI research team attempted to re-interview all of the year-one participants
who were still incarcerated within Washington DOC In total we conducted 80 re-interviews
Only 4 participants refused re-interviews 1 died and 21 were unavailable because of
institutional transfers or being on parole This drop-out rate is low compared to similar studies7
In year two 28 participants were in the IMU and 52 were back in the general prison
population These year-two follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and two hours
During the research teamrsquos return visits to each IMU in the state in year two the team made
presentations to IMU staff about the research findings from year one including the results of
the year-one staff interviews Unlike prisoners staff were not randomly selected for interviews
during year one Rather a strategic convenience sample of custody and non-custody staff was
identified Efforts were made to interview custody staff from all three shifts non-custody staff
(medical and programming) and supervisory staff at all five facilities Staff at each facility were
informed ahead of time about scheduled interview trips and encouraged by DOC administrative
leadership to participate if they felt comfortable Once on site at each facility UCI team
(US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018) httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf
7 JH Kleschinsky LB Bosworth SE Nelson EK Walsh HJ Shaffer ldquoPersistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samplesrdquo J Stud Alcohol Drugs Vol 705751ndash761 (2009) B Western A Braga D Hureau C Sirois ldquoStudy retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach populationrdquo Proc Natl Acad Sci USA Vol 11320 5477ndash5485 (2016)
17
members directly approached staff (usually in the afternoon or on the second day of interviews
on site after the work of identifying and moving prisoners into interview rooms was underway)
to identify willing interview participants Staff were informed participation was voluntary and
would not involve incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them
adversely and that all information shared would be protected and anonymized In all 77 staff
from across all five IMUs and headquarters participated in interviews Staff included
correctional officers supervisors mental and medical health practitioners program and
educational instructors and institutional and headquarters leadership Since staff were
strategically sampled and many staff interviewed worked both in the IMU and in other units
within the prison a refusal rate cannot readily be calculated for the staff interviews Staff
interviews lasted between 30 minutes and 3 hours
All interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed
translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details
(names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti for analysis (as discussed further below) All
identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings transcripts
BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a locked
filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible only
through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data
cleaning and linking The University of California IRB approved this study as did the Washington
DOC research department
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS
To develop a codebook for analyzing these hundreds of hours of interview data six team
members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-line inductively exploring how participants
understood restrictive housing generating an initial list of over 500 codes8 These codes were
further refined and categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 9 thematic
code groups IMU Relations Use of Force Safety Health IMU Culture IMU Policy IMU
Conditions Enduring the IMU and Prison Work Issues After a round of pilot coding in which
each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one recoding coding
discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of interest such
as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months to resolve
8 K Charmaz Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis (Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006) Y Chun Tie M Birks K Francis ldquoGrounded theory research A design framework for novice researchersrdquo SAGE open medicine 7 1-8 (2019)
18
discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were calculated
for intercoder agreement
BPRS data were imported into SPSS and Stata to generate descriptive statistics including the
comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS items and factors among three groups of
prisoner interview participants year-one participants year-two participants housed in the IMU
and year-two participants housed in the general population Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos
test were performed to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing
location time raceethnicity and gang status
FINDINGS
We collected a large amount of robustly detailed data for this project and are still in the process
of analyzing and synthesizing across the administrative data surveys and interview transcripts
To date the UCI research team has published three peer-reviewed articles based on this
research two drawing primarily on the prisoner
interviews in leading public health journals the Initial Publications American Journal of Public Health and PLOS One 1 Reiter et al American Journal of
Public Health (2020) and one drawing primarily on DOC administrative 2 Strong et al PLOS One (2020) data in a leading criminology journal Justice 3 Lovell et al Justice Quarterly (2020) Quarterly All three articles are included as
appendices to this report In addition to
summarizing findings from those articles here we include as-yet unpublished findings from our
analyses of administrative data and our surveys and interviews with prisoners and staff We
present three categories of findings (1) patterns and conditions in restrictive housing use (2)
impacts on staff and (3) impacts on prisoners
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
Over the 2010s DOC implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals we focus on
analyzing here First DOC sought to reduce the number of people in restrictive housing
Second DOC sought to reduce the length of time individuals spend in restrictive housing Third
DOC sought to mitigate the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive housing Our analysis
indeed finds improvements in each of these three areas of focus though we also identify
fluctuations in the degree of improvement barriers and challenges to implementing these
improvements and additional areas that might deserve to be the focus of additional reforms
We focus in this section primarily on our analysis of administrative data the six cohorts of
snapshot data at three-year-intervals between 2002 and 2017 along with restrictive-housing
oriented policy reforms and reports we collected as part of our analysis We concentrate
19
particularly on maximum custody status in the IMU the central focus of our study However
where relevant we also present findings on other population in the IMU As we detail in our
2020 Justice Quarterly article (Appendix C) where we published some of the initial findings
presented here a range of custody statuses and housing locations are highly relevant to
understanding overall restrictive housing use For instance those on maximum custody status
outside of an IMU and those not on maximum custody status in an IMU both experience
restrictive housing conditions and also reflect the range of behavioral challenges and security
threats DOC is managing at any given time
FLUCTUATIONS IN POPULATIONS AND LENGTHS OF STAY IN IMUS
Overall the maximum custody population in IMUs in Washington state was lower in 2017 (342
prisoners) than at its peak in 2011 (472 prisoners) However over the entire period of our
quantitative data analysis there were many fluctuations in this population from a low of 149
prisoners in 2002 to another dip to 283 prisoners in 2014 Figure 1 presents the number of
prisoners in IMUs by custody status from 2002 to 2017 These numbers suggest that the widely
touted reductions in the DOC maximum custody IMU population which inspired this study
were not sustained over the course of the study Those in IMU who were not on maximum
custody statusmdashlargely those held on administrative or disciplinary segregationmdashsaw similar
variation in population over time peaking in 2008 and falling somewhat in subsequent years
Figure 1 Prisoners in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
800
700
s r 600
en 177
osi 500 337
r 260
Pf 291
o 400
r e 300
mb 144
Nu 472
200 105 338 342
283 100 228
149
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
As a proportion of the total prison population those held in IMUs peaked in 2008 when 39
percent of the prison population was housed in an IMU That proportion was substantially
20
similar in 2011 before dropping slightly in 2014 and 2017 Figure 2 presents the percentage of
the total prison population held in IMU by custody status
Figure 2 Percentage of Total Prison Population in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
3 27
20
09
14
16
09
19
10
17141
2
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n 19
07
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
Ave
rage
Day
s in
IMU
Reductions in the average length of stay (LOS) for prisoners on maximum custody status in the
IMU were more sustained than the 2014 population reductions Figure 3 presents the average
number of days in the IMU by custody status For those on maximum custody status in the IMU
on the 2017 snapshot date the average LOS in the IMU was 214 days lower than even in 2002
(average LOS 227 days) and a dramatic decrease from the 2011 peak average LOS of nearly
348 days This represents a reduction in average lengths of IMU stays of more than four months
ndash an impressive policy intervention Similarly the average LOS in IMU for those held in IMUs but
not on maximum custody status on the snapshot date (likely those on administrative or
disciplinary segregation) saw a sustained decrease across the study period from an average of
114 days in 2002 to 71 days in 2017
Figure 3 Average Length of Stay in IMU (Days) by Custody Status and Confinement Location 2002-2017
348 326
214
128117115 91
7166
306 284
227
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
21
These reductions in the average IMU LOS however is only one measure of how much time
prisoners are spending in IMUs Another measure of time-in-the-IMU is cumulative over a
prisonerrsquos entire sentence how much time Figure 4 Average Cumulative Days Spent in IMU by All Prisoners 2002-2017 will he spend in an IMU setting9 Across the
entire Washington prison population 90 cumulative time spent in an IMU has 80 increased steadily from an average of 43
Cum
ulat
ive
Day
s in
IMU
in IMU declined in recent years for the maximum custody population a greater share of the
incarcerated population experienced placement in an IMU
This analysis suggests two critical areas of focus Figure 5 Percentage of All Prisoners Spending at Least One Day in an IMU 2002-2017 IMU reform First reductions in IMU
populations and lengths of stay must be 3433tracked over time to analyze whether they are
sustained Second rates of IMU use represent
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n
another critical measure in assessing IMU
reform in addition to populations and lengths
of stay In our 2020 Justice Quarterly article we
hypothesize that IMU capacity is closely tied to
IMU use noting that IMU populations increase
with increasing bed capacity and decrease with
decreasing bed capacity this hypothesis
requires further analysis and deserves further
policy attention
24 25 28
30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
days in 2002 to almost double that at 82
days on average in 2017 (see Figure 4)
Indeed a greater proportion of people in
DOC experienced IMU confinement over
time In 2002 24 of the prison population
had spent at least one day in an IMU By
2017 over one-third (34) of the prison
population had spent time in an IMU (Figure
5) In short while the average length of stay
9 For each snapshot year cumulative length of stay in IMU is measured from the beginning of each prisonerrsquos current sentence up until the snapshot date
22
In sum the 2014 reductions in maximum custody IMU populations in Washington have not been sustained Average lengths of stay in IMU for the maximum custody population have steadily decreased since 2011 but more prisoners in Washington DOC experience IMU
confinement each year Decreasing IMU capacity and reducing lengths of stay are both key to
sustaining decreases in IMU populations
RACIAL DISPROPORTIONALITIES
While Washington DOC had some successes in reducing IMU use especially in reducing average
lengths of stay the racially disproportionate impact of the IMU has increased dramatically since
2002 The racial disproportion of the IMU actually peaked in 2014 when the IMU population
had recently declined Figure 6 presents the racialethnic makeup of the IMU maximum custody
and general prison populations In 2014 37 percent of
maximum custody IMU prisoners were Hispanic as
compared to only 12 percent of the general prison
population As the maximum custody IMU population
increased this racial disproportionality decreased
slightly in 2017 27 percent of maximum custody IMU
prisoners were Hispanic as compared to only 13 percent of the general prison population
Figure 7 presents the racialethnic disproportionality of the IMU maximum custody population
relative to the general prison population Hispanic gang members were similarly over-
represented in the maximum custody IMU population in these years (see Figure 8)
This racial disproportionality in maximum custody IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories (especially infraction rates)
and suggests an area ripe for further policy attention We look forward to conducting further
analyses of the administrative data to better understand how these various predictors of
maximum custody status IMU classifications interact over time
Between 2005 and 2017 Hispanic prisoners were 2-3 times as likely to be in the IMU as in the general prison population
23
Figure 4 Racial and Ethnic Make-Up IMU Maximum Custody and General Prison Population 2002-2017
White Non-Hispanic LatinoHispanic
70 70
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population General Population IMU-Max IMU-Max
Black Non-Hispanic Other Non-Hispanic
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
30 30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max General Population IMU-Max
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
0
10
20
24
-
Figure 5 RacialEthnic Disproportionality in the IMU Maximum Custody Population 2002-2017 D
ispro
port
iona
lity
Ratio
35
30
25
20
15
10
05
00 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
White Non-Hispanic Black Non-Hispanic OtherUnknown Hispanic
How to read this chart
Disproportionality ratios (DR) greater than one reflect disproportionate representation in the IMU Maximum Custody population relative to the general population
DR equal to one reflects equal representation in IMU Maximum Custody and general population groups
DR lower than one reflects an under representation of the racialethnic group
25
BEHAVIORAL PROFILES GANG AFFILIATION AND SERIOUS INFRACTIONS
While our analysis demonstrates that racial disproportionality steadily increased among maximum custody IMU prisoners over the study period especially relative to the general prison population overall behavioral profiles among both general population and maximum custody IMU prisoners fluctuated over the study period
First in the general population the overall proportion of prisoners identified as gang affiliated increased only slightly over the study period from 19 percent to 24 percent of all prisoners While the overall proportion of gang-affiliated prisoners in the IMU was about 3 times higher this proportion also increased only slightly over the study period from 60 percent to 67 percent of all maximum custody IMU prisoners In the general population white- and black-affiliated gang members remained relatively stable over the study period (4-5 percent of the population and 9-10 percent of the population respectively) In the maximum-custody IMU population white- and black-affiliated gang membership fluctuated somewhat across the snapshot years while Hispanic-affiliated gang membership increased substantially from 21 percent in 2002 to 32 percent in 2017 Relative to their share of general population Hispanic-affiliated gang members were consistently over-represented in the maximum-custody IMU population making up nearly 40 percent of the population in both 2008 and 2014 Figure 8 displays this fluctuating over-representation of Hispanic-affiliated gang members while Figure 9 displays the racial breakdown of gang-affiliates in the maximum custody IMU population
Figure 6 Affiliation with HispanicLatino Gangs in IMU
Maximum Custody and General Populations
Between 2002 and 2017 Hispanic-affiliated gang membership in the general prison population doubled from 4 percent to 8 percent and in the maximum custody IMU population doubled from 21 percent to a peak of 40 percent in 2014
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max
26
Figure 7 Gang Affiliation in the IMU Maximum Custody Population by Type of Gang
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Hispanic-Affiliated Black-Affiliated White-Affiliated Other Gang
Second in the general population overall annual infraction rates decreased slightly over the study period (from an average of 13 infractions per year in 2002 to an average of 11 in 2017) Figure 10 displays average annual overall infraction rates as well as counts of violent assaults and staff assaults for the maximum custody IMU and general prison populations Average numbers of violent infraction and staff assaults remained low and stable at an average of 05 violent infractions per year and 01 staff assaults per
Annual infraction rates and counts year in the general population Between 2005 and of both violent and staff
2017 infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU infractions were fairly stable over population were fairly stable However overall time in both the general prison infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU population and the maximum population were about 5-6 times higher than in the custody IMU population from 2005 general prison population Following a peak of 83 in 2002 the mean annual infraction rate for the maximum custody IMU population fluctuated between 4 and 5 infractions per year while the average number of violent infractions hovered around 3 and the average number of staff assaults hovered just under one The relative stability of serious misconduct in both the general and the maximum custody IMU populations (as compared to the instability of the IMU population over this period) raise questions about whether and how infractions are related to maximum custody IMU placements ndash questions we look forward to addressing in future analyses
27
Figure 8 In-Prison Violations IMU Maximum Cu stody and General Population 2002-2017
IMU Maximum Custody General Population
9 9
8 8
s n 7 7
oitca 6 6
rfnI f 5 5
o e ta 4 4
Rtn 3 3
uC
o
2 2
1 1
0 0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Annual Infraction Rate Annual Infraction Rate Violent Infractions (Count) Violent Infractions (Count) Staff Assaults (Count) Staff Assaults (Count)
EXISTING POLICY REFORM SUPPORTS FURTHER RESTRICTIVE HOUSING REDUCTIONS
Over the 2010s Washington DOC enacted an impressively wide range of reforms in order to achieve the reductions in IMU populations and lengths of stay described above These reforms also sought to mitigate the harshness of the conditions in IMUs or restrictive housing Table 1 below provides our summary of the reforms we learned about in conversations with DOC leadership staff and prisoners as well as through searches of policy documents archived on the DOC website These reforms included (a) institutionally-oriented reforms like altering conditions of confinement especially through providing new programming opportunities for prisoners in the IMU (b) organizational restructuring designed to facilitate delivering these new programs and (c) individually-focused reforms to support behavioral modification better mental health care and alternatives to IMU placements Dan Pacholke who was the Secretary of Corrections during the early planning stages of this project co-authored a 2015 report More
28
Than Emptying Beds which describes many of these reforms in more detail centralize decision-making implement programming in segregation and support staff10
Our interviews with prisoners and staff confirmed that these reforms were making a difference day-to-day in terms of the overall operation and individual experience of living and working in the IMUs Specifically staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
Table 1 Categories and Types of Washington DOC Restrictive Housing Reform as identified in 2017
Conditions of Confinement
Organizational Restructuring
Behavior Modification
Mental Health Preventative
Congregate Programming
Creation of a Mission Housing Administrator
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (in-cell)
Elimination of self-harm infractions
Alternative sanctions
Level System Mission-Based Housing Units
amp Teams
Individual Behavior Management
Program (IBMP)
Disruptive Hygiene Protocol
Alternative Specialized
Housing Units (TRU WRU)
Increased Elective access to
programming (GED
Redemption
Facility Risk Management
Teams
Chemical dependency class
counselors MH staff
(attending to
Operation Place Safety (2013-14)
Book Club) prisoner-staff ratios)
Nature Immersion
(Blue) Room
Indeterminate sentencing
TransitionStep-down Unit
From staff we consistently heard that there was less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than in the early 2000s Staff described how prior to recent reforms in the IMUs cell extractions were common ldquoIt was completely rocking and rollingrdquo was a phrase we heard repeatedly But by 2017 cell extractions and other violent prisoner-staff encounters were rare One staff member we interviewed mourned the change acknowledging ldquoI really enjoyed cell extractionsrdquo but he also said he knew the culture change represented an improvement in everyonersquos well-being ldquoIs it actually good for everyone to do that stuff you know what I mean No The answer is nordquo This acceptance of non-violent de-escalation as the
10 Dan Pacholke amp Sandy Mullins More Than Emptying Beds A Systems Approach to Segregation Reform (Washington DC Bureau of Justice Assistance 2015) No NCJ249858 httpsbjaojpgovsitesgfilesxyckuh186filespublicationsMorethanEmptyingBedspdf
29
status quo was especially noticeable in comparison with data Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago Prisoners also agreed that cell extractions were rare as one noted ldquoWere not doing a lot of cell-extractions here I havent seen a cell-extraction since Ive been here So compared to the California system and the Federal system ndash I was teamed [extracted
from my cell] just to give me fluidsrdquo Our pre-interview Staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
surveys confirmed these qualitative descriptions a majority of staff (just over 60 percent of respondents) reported they ldquodid not feel unsaferdquo working in the IMU and even more prisoners (75 percent of respondents) reported that they had never felt unsafe in the IMU
From prisoners we consistently heard that they had access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of other programs Although prisoners frequently expressed concerns about the quality and frequency of healthcare they received they also consistently reported that they were able to access at least some care filing and receiving responses to medical kites seeing medical staff regularly and getting adequate care for major illnesses and terminal diseases like cancer For instance in our pre-interview surveys more than 50 percent of prisoners reported seeing medical staff daily One prisonerrsquos comments were representative ldquoI do trust the mental health staff yes I just believe that they should do morerdquo But another said he appreciated the level of care in his current IMU ldquoI would say that this one addresses certain mental health issues better than others you know Theyrsquore more quick to deal with the mental health here with more one-on-onerdquo
Overall in our interviews with prisoners and staff as well as in our observations of custody classification committee meetings we saw that those prisoners remaining on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods
bull Prisoners are in the IMU for had well-documented histories of severe
specific identifiable reasons behavioral issues We interviewed prisoners who
bull Prisoners receive regular had repeatedly attacked staff prisoners who had individualized assessments regarding repeatedly harmed themselves through actions their continued IMU placement like head banging and swallowing sharp objects bull Treatment and custody staff work and prisoners who had been in the IMU so long together to develop targeted they did not want to return to the general prison interventions with the goal of population In observations in IMUs and at transitioning even the most headquarters we witnessed compassionate behaviorally challenging and risky custody and treatment staff grappling with how to individuals out of the IMU design individualized plans to address and overcome these behavioral challenges ndash from weekly check-ins with headquarters leadership to the provision of tailored incentives for exercise equipment and art supplies In particular the
30
Mission Housing Administrator is familiar with every individual in the IMU regularly assessing and documenting justifications for their placem ent institutionalizing such individual-level knowledge and attention is critical to maintenance of existing progress and continued reform
In sum prisoners are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons prisoners receive regular individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement by a classification committee and treatment and custody staff work together to develop targeted interventions with the goal of transi tioning e ven the most behavioral ly chall enging and risk y i ndividuals out of the IMU This is in stark contrast to other systems like California where hundreds of prisoners have spent years in restrictive housing with little or no evidence of unresolved or severe behavioral issues justifying their continued maintenance in highly restrictive conditions
Still administrative data suggests that Washington DOC rsquos 2014 IMU population reductions have not been sustained that an increasing proportion of people in DOC experience IMU
confinement over the study period and that Washington DOC is a leader among state this confinement has a racially correctional systems in restrictive housing disproportionate impact Moreover as we reform administrative leaders have built a detail below prisoners and staff raised a solid foundation for continued reforms ndash number of concerns with both IMU conditions including IMU population reductions and reforms decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions Nonetheless Washington DOC has laid a solid
foundation for continued reforms ndash including IMU population reductions decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions ndash with the policy changes they have implemented over the last five years especially Both individual- and institution-level reforms have enabled the successes DOC has achieved to date Indeed these reforms demonstrate that Washington is a leader among state correctional systems in seeking to understand how prisoners end up in restrictive housing for extended periods designing programs to change IMU -stay trajectories and implementing alternati ve pathways that shift patterns of restrictive housing placements across institutions
IMPACTS ON STAFF
In this section we focus on our analysis of (1) the 90 surveys we collected from staff working in IMUs and (2) the 77 interviews we conducted with sta ff working in or supervising Among the 90 staff completing sur veys 74 per cent were mal e 66 pe rcent were married 84 perce nt were white and their average age was 44 Among the 77 staff completing interviews 74 percent were male 57 percent were marrie d 84 percent were white and their average age was 42
31
Because we do not have overall demographics of staff in W ashington DOC we cannot compare the demographics of our interview participants to the overall demographics of DOC staff
We highl ight four the mes from our surveys of and interviews with staff Each theme suggests areas where DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU staff as well as areas where DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to staff well- being positive aspects of IMU staff culture negative effects of working in the IMU on staff staff desire for input into IMU policies and procedures and specific staff objections to IMU reforms
APPRECIATION FOR IMU STAFF CULTURE
IMU staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their colleagues and with immediate supervisors ndash both in the ir sur vey response s and duri ng i nterviews Nearly 90 percent of correctional officers surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unit rdquo for instance On average staff described being satisfied with their
IMU staff largely like their jobs trust jobs 75 percent said they were mostly or very
their colleagues and immediate satisfied and 64 percent said they would take the supervisors and feel safe at work same job again Likewise 75 percent reported that This satisfaction and professionalism their immediate supervisors frequently asked for can and should be leveraged in their opinions about problems (describing t he implementing IMU reforms frequency as either ldquosometimesrdquo or ldquoalwaysrdquo) And two-thirds of staff (67 percent) reported feeling safe working in the IMU
In our informal conversations and formal interviews with staff we repeatedly observed and heard staff expressing trust and appreciation for their colleagues in the IMU In some cases our presence required additional staffing on the units and many ldquoregularrdquo IMU staff noted how working with staff unfamiliar with IMU routines and relationships was disruptive in contrast to their usual trusting relationship with their ldquoregularrdquo IMU colleagues One staff member rsquos comment succinctly represents the perspectives of correctional officers who appreciate working in the highly controlled IMU environment with trusted partners
I think IMU is one of the safest places to work in the whole prison system I mean theyre locked down 23 out of 24 hours a day youre escorting them with another person theyre in restraints Yeah things can happen Sure the y can make weapons Sure they can do ndash but they can do that out there more easily To me you know what you have in an IMU and you got some ndash at least you got a partner there with you under the circumstances
32
In sum IMU staff largely like their jobs tr ust their colleagues and immediate supervisors and feel safe at work This solid foundation of satisfaction and professionalism is a significant asset to DOC leadership work ing with line staff to communicate about and implement IMU reforms
NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON STA FF OF IMU W ORK
Although staff described feeling safe in the IMU satisfaction with the work and loyalty and trust in their colleagues they also described negative effects of working in the IMU environment especially ongoing negative mental and physical health consequences Among the 90 staff completing surveys the average staff member reported their overall health was good (a rating of 3 out of 5) A significant minority of staff (one quarter) however reported their overall health was poor or fair (a rating of 1 or 2 out of 5) While their self-assessments of their overall health varied staff consistently reported high levels of stress the average staff member reported their overall stress level as moderate (a rating of 2 out of 3) and one -third of all respondents reported the ir overall stress levels as high (a rating of 3 out of 3) Staff consistently reported that these high stress levels affected their overall health 80 percent of staff reported that stress had affected their health either ldquosomerdquo or ldquoa lotrdquo (a rating of 2 or 3 out of 3) in the past year Overall staff thought DOC failed to address correctional officersrsquo physical and mental health concerns they consistently disagreed with positive statements like ldquo DOC provides adequate services to me et correctional officersrsquo physical health needs rdquo Additional investments in supporting staff well-being could be both well received and impactful
Comments on the surveys and our subsequent interviews with staff in IMUs provided context for these overall reports about high stress levels in the IMU First staff perceived having greater ndash and more unreasonable ndash obligations during a workday in the IMU than elsewhere in the prison For example one correctional officer wrote ldquoIMU staff do twice as many duties as regular staff They never get compensated for all the extra wor k and stressrdquo This sentiment of imbalanced workload across units was echoed by another custody staff respondent ldquoStaff are
consistently overworked in the IMUs They are IMU staff identified key stressors required to do a job that requires twice the work of 1 Being overworked by additional a correctional officer working e lsewhere Staff deal
responsibilities with a lot of stress but are still reprimanded for 2 Being institutionally undervalued calling in sickrdquo
and under-supported 3 Needing to be hypervigilant at Second while staff often reported trusting
work and at home collaborative relationships with their immediate supervisors they perceived institutional leadership
as unsympathetic and indifferent to the unique stressors of working (and feeling overworked) in the IMU Specifically correctional officers criticized DOC in general for not providing support
33
for staff and thereby undermining safety in the IMU As one officer said (and m any others echoed) ldquoThis place does not care about staff All they care about is making things look good and keeping the offenders happy at all costs This results in COs sa ying screw it and not caring anymore which makes things unsaferdquo
Third while staff largely reported feeling safe at work in the IMU they also reported being hypervigilant on the job and also at home off the job Correctional officers reported that they were aware of the pervasiveness of risk in their work ldquoWe all have to understand that when we take a job like this anything can happen at any time That is the risk that we all take This job is not for everybodyrdquo Nearly all (98) survey respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they ldquoalways have to keep it in mind that t rouble could happen any timerdquo while at work Moreover respondentsrsquo levels of stress and perceptions of risk were strongly correlated those respondents who reported they worked in ldquodangerous jobsrdquo and were always dealing with ldquosome sort of crisisrdquo were also more likely to report higher stress levels
Importantly staff seemed to struggle with leaving these anxieties hypervigilant states of mind and stressors at work Staff consistently described being on edge and worried about their safety outside of work As one staff member said
I definitely notice like going to hellip fairs and that kind of stuff in the summer with the family hellip Irsquom definitely looking around a lot more Even going to like banks I look around a lot more I constantly ndash my headrsquos constantly on a swivel and Irsquo m in a place I donrsquo t really know Irsquo m definitely looking ndash grocery store Irsquo m constantly looked down ndash standing in the checkout line because there rsquos a million people standing there and yoursquo re constantl y look ing around lik e oh y eah that guyrsquos done time that guy has done time Like it rsquos - you can ndash itrsquos really weird when definitely get a sense for that kind of stuff And definitely keep an eye out
Another described how this habit of ldquolooking aroundrdquo and ldquokeeping an eye outrdquo was both a source of stress and a necessity for safety ldquoMy wife gives me a hard time about it all the time Shes like lsquoDo you ever turn the dirt bag meter off rsquo hellip And it may drive her nuts but i t keeps my family saferdquo One of the most common manifestations of this hypervigilance staff described Messaging about steps WADOC
is taking to value and support was being sure to sit in corners and face out looking at staff is critical some of these doors ldquoIn a restaurant I canrsquo t sit with my back to a steps should involve addressing group of peoplerdquo And another said ldquoI wonrsquo t let people pervasive hypervigilance and its
get behind me rdquo A growing body of literature about effects on stress correctional officer health suggests this pervasive
34
hypervigilance among correctional officers has long-term traumatic effects our data suggests that working in the IMU may exacerbate these effects 11
In sum our surveys of and interviews with staff revealed specific stress ors associated with work in the IMU the pressure of additional responsibilities and feeling overworked a sense of being institutionally undervalued and under -supported and percepti ons of high risk leading to persistent hypervigilance even outside of work These specific sources of stress in turn suggest areas where DOC could intervene to mitigate stress For instance messaging about steps DOC is taking to value and support staff and about DOC awareness of the additional work pressures some reforms entail could mitigate stress improve the culture of IMUs and even facilitate acceptance of future reforms For instance to the extent reforms actually reduce risk o r violence in the IMU communicating this clearly to staff could mitigate some of the hypervigilance that makes their work and home lives stressful
STAFF DESIRE FOR P OLICY INPUT
Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them fr om ldquoheadquartersrdquo In our survey of staff most staff across all facilities (63 percent) said that they ldquooften find it difficult to agree with this Departmentrsquo s policies on important issuesrdquo Likewise in our interviews with correctional officers and serge ants (45 of our 77 staff interviews) the majority (80 percent) reported that they experienced tension and conflict around IMU policies Indeed while three -quarters of staff reported that their immediate supervisors frequently asked for their opinions two-thirds reported that higher level administrators either ldquoneverrdquo or ldquorarelyrdquo asked for the ir opini ons
However when we asked staff to elaborate on what was wrong with IMU policies and reforms they almost always focused on the process by which reforms we re introduced rathe r than on the substance of the policy They described simply being told that a policy had changed without either being asked whether they agreed with the change or understanding why the policy had changed Specifically correctional officers and sergeants complained that administrative decision-makers above them were out of touch with the r eality of cur rent operations ldquoThey just make the decision hellip but we really donrsquo t have any say or influence how those kinds of decision are made They rsquore made by administrators that havenrsquo t been unit staff
11 See Lois James amp Natalie Todak ldquoPrison employment and post-traumatic stress disorder Risk and protective factorsrdquo American Journal of Industrial Medicine Vol 619 (2018) 725-32
35
in a long long time That donrsquo t remember or they forgot where they came fromrdquo Staff interpreted their lack of opportunities for input as some combination of leadership being lazy and uncaring ldquoLik e lsquowhy are they having us do this Donrsquo t they understand that this is a bad idea you knowrsquo You know the option is either they do understand itrsquo s a bad idea and they dont care or they donrsquo t know and theyrsquo re you know canrsquo t be bothered to askrdquo
On the other hand when unit managers or other leadership staff solicited the opinions of line staff about policy implementation the staff tended to be more accepting and less critical of the policy For instance in one facility a staff member described a policy change to allow porters on third shift in restrictive housing and how the sergeant and correctional unit supervisor (CUS) consulted the correctional officers about how to implement the policy ldquoSo what they did is the sergeant and the CUS came and ta lked to the staff and said lsquoWho would you guys recommend They have to be IMS program They have to be level four And they have to infraction-freersquo Fine So we all picked as a group hellip He was super polite model inmaterdquo While the correctional staff we re not involved in the formal policy decision to install porters on third shift administrators made room for correctional officersrsquo input and involvement by allowing them to choose who that person would be By involving correctional officers in that proce ss they increased staff support for and buy-in to the policy change
Indeed our research team heard repeatedly from staff that simply having the opportunity to talk with us about their work express their opinions and reflect on their experiences was a comfort and a relief ldquolike a weight off their shouldersrdquo Staff told us this individually duri ng interviews and communicated this during our de-briefs with unit leadership at the end Staff wanted more input into policy ndashto have
of each site visit in the summer of 201 7 The a chance to air their opinions and to have
eager and thoughtful participation by staff in input into mechanisms of policy
our interviews provides yet another implementation on the ground
indication of their interest in and wi llingness to engage in conversations about policy reform In fact bringing in outside researchers to systematically seek input from staff (as DOC frequently d oes) whether in the form of surveys or interviews might be one way to increase both staff perce ptions that they have a voice in policy processes and their willingness to implement new policies
In sum survey responses interview analyses and informal conversations all suggest that the manner in which reform and policy changes are presented to sta ff matters the more the policy is explained and the more staff input is solicited in the reform process especially as to the details and mechanisms of policy implementation the more likely staff will be to support and facilitate reform implementation
36
STAFF OBJECTIONS TO I MU R EFORMS
While staff most frequently complained about the manner in which reforms were introduced and especially about their lack of input in policy implementation they also described specific objections to reforms ndash largely in terms of the impact these reforms had on their day -to-day work and their percepti ons of whether or not staff safety and well- being were being pr ioritized
First staff perceived many reforms as prioritizing prisoner well-being over staff well-being IMU staff described IMU prisoners as the ldquoworst of the worstrdquo ndash the least deserving of the undeserving And they repeatedly described any new or additional benefits to prisoners ndash whether additional commissary items more time out of cell or more programming opportunities ndash as being risky and harmful to staff In some cases staff perceived the reforms or benefits to prisoners as pushing staff into new job roles for w hich they lacked both time and training For instance one correctional officer said ldquoI mean usually we come here and we have to do our job which is you know the yard showers and all that and you know guys say they program and we donrsquo t have time to figure out what theyrsquo re programming I mean thatrsquo s not our job description rdquo And another correctional officer described feeling as if he was expected to ldquodo more with lessrdquo ldquoYou know the other big thing with the removal of staff is the addition of programs you know So it seems like the classic managerial approach of do more with less and thatrsquos you know never well received by the people that have to do the more with lessrdquo In other words staff tended to see rehabilitative -oriented reforms as both a burden and oppositional to their fundamental job role ndash to maintain safety and security
Second staff perceived reforms addressing individual prisonersrsquo special needs like ext reme mental illness as inconsistent In fact staff repeatedly described individualized treatment as dangerous ndash encouraging prisoners to exploit and manipulate the rules to their own benefit For instance one correctional officer described his objecti ons to a protocol for responding to instances of feces-smear ing in the IMU ldquoIt is a
Staff characterized reforms as inconsistent manipulation point and they figured that out risky and dangerous Avoiding publicly
Hey on a Tuesday and Thursday we donrsquo t contradicting staff and communicating have yard and showers Well I want to take a more systematically about the benefits of shower so Irsquom going to smear feces on t he reform for staff could minimize resistance wall so I can go get my shower Thatrsquo s how that works And we have to do i trdquo Other correctional officers objected to provision of things like a nerf ball for throwing or soap for carving ndash both individualized attempts to address specific behavioral problems ndash as opening the door for other prisoners to make new demands both adding to officersrsquo daily list of obligations and making security harder to maintain
37
Third staff described how reforms prioritizing prisonersrsquo needs undermined their ability to safely manage a difficult population For instance one correctional officer described his frustration with trying to enforce the rules and being undermined or chastised by supervisors who were prioritizing prisoner well- being
Lots of the time we rsquore more nervous about getting in trouble for refusing guys If you ask them (about) yard and shower and they donrsquo t answer and you ask them multiple times and raising your voice to hopefully get their reaction then turn around and you refuse them and then all of a sudden they rsquore bitching and moaning about it and then all of a sudden now theyrsquo re getting it Itrsquo s just one of those things where it gets discouraging but it rsquos ndash I can only do my job
Another correctional officer described frustration with reforms seeking to limit the imposition of infractions and sanctions within the IMU ldquoNow you try to correct an inmate rsquos actions ndash Irsquo ve seen a lot of my infractions get thrown out not even processed hellip to where wersquo re not holding the people responsible And that becomes a safety risk for us Because the inmates donrsquo t show that same respectrdquo In sum correctional officers emphasize consistency as a tool for both maintaining their own authority and minimizing manipulation by prisoners
Staff did not simply describe how and why they objected to IMU reforms They also described how they resisted these reforms undermining policy implementation by ldquo burningrdquo prisoners on out-of-cell time breaking rules adhering to the letter rather than the spirit of a policy and encouraging grievances against leadership Often correctional officers justifi ed non-compliance or undermining policies as the only way to compensate for a lack of resources such as staff shortages and time limitations during a shift When describing this kind of undermining of policies interviewees contextualized these strategie s as coping strategies necessary to mitigate resource issues staff explained that additional programming and movement required more time and careful planning over the course of a shift For example one correctional officer described how he purposefully tried to reduce movement during his shift by asking about yards and showers as early as possible He elaborated about this tactic
It often results in the pri soner fi ling a gr ievance with the i nstitution Howeve r custody staff are aware of this and encourage these kinds of grievances as they provide evidence for their argument that administration are making unrealistic demands on them with the introduction of new policies and programs in restrictive housing units
Not all IMU correctional officers were so resistant to reform however For instance another officer (a sergeant) described IMU policies as changing frequently but characterized adapting to those changes as part of his job ldquoI adapt pretty well with the change You have to around
38
here Itrsquo s changing every day Whether itrsquo s a good change or not yoursquo re going to have your personal opinion and I sometimes donrsquo t agree but again Irsquo m a person who adapts to changerdquo This same office r in fact articulately described the importance of orienting re spectfully rather than punitive ly to prisoners in the IMU
I just always treat them as I would want to be treated or how I was raised which is with communication and just being respectful Irsquoll try to give you an example Like somebody will say lsquo That guyrsquos not going to get out of his cellrsquo Irsquo m going to say lsquo Whyrsquo Hersquo s going to say lsquo Because he was arguing with me and he rsquos a threat nowrsquo I go lsquoWell why not work wi th the guy and talk to him to tr y to come up with a better resolution rsquo Rather than just no movement and pi ss him off some more because no movementrsquo s not going to teach him any different than he rsquos already doing I mean if yoursquo re swearing and cussing at me you got your arms out and your fists going at me thatrsquo s not going to h elp you by having no movement Talking it outrsquos going to help you more So Irsquo m more of a ndash I guess Irsquom a littl e more libe ral on that part
While some staff we interviewed described this kind of ldquorespectfulrdquo or ldquoliberalrdquo approach as ldquodrinking the K ool-Aidrdquo of reform arguments coming from headquarters plenty of others asserted at least acceptance of if not also support for the ldquorespectfulrdquo approach As David Lovell noted comparing interviews he conducted in the early 2000s to those he conducted as part of our team in 2017 ldquoA hell of a lot has changed I did not hear the same stories about neglect and abuserdquo 12
In sum understanding the specific objections staff raised to existing reforms is critical to minimizing resistance and encouraging successful implementation of future reforms Indeed the specific objections staff raised to reforms suggest important areas where communication between line staff and supervisors could be clarified and improved
bull The perceived contradiction between rehabilitation and saf ety could be acknowledged and addressed in communicating with staff about reforms
bull The possibilities for simultaneously improving both prisoner and staff well- being through reform could be emphasized
12 Conversation with David Lovell Feb 24 2021 notes on file with author
39
bull Supervisors and non-custody staff advocating for indiv idualized interventions need to (1) address line staff concerns with inconsistency in treatment and policy and (2) strategize to avoid undermining line staffrsquo s authority in day-to-day interactions
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS
In this section we focus on our analysis of the interviews we conducted with a random sample of 106 maximum custody status IMU prisoners in the summer of 2017 and re -interviews conducted with 80 of these participants still incarcerated in the summer of 20 18 Where relevant we also include some findings from the 225 surveys we collected from prisoners in IMUs in the spring of 2017 Our random sample of 106 prisoner interview participants had a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU and mean of 5 prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Forty -two percent of our participants were white 12 percent were African American 23 percent were Latino 23 percent were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differences between our participants and all people held in IMU s at the time of our interviews People in the general prison population at the time of our interviews however were notably different than those held in IMU as they are older less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang -affiliated and less likely to be Latino
In this section we highlight six themes from our interviews with prisoners Each suggests areas where Washington DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU prisoners as well as areas wher e DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to prisoner well-being trust access to programs social contact policies health (both physical and mental) long-term management challenges and reentry
TRUSTING STA FF TO B E RESPONSIVE
A central theme of our interviews was that prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food care and safety Prisoners consistently expressed confidence that things like kites grievances and mail would be handled and delivered in good faith They understood processes for communicating needs and concerns and expected to receive timely (if not always
satisfactory) responses to their requests and Prisoners in WADOC frequently complaints Indeed when we asked prisoners if they described experiences of basic
trusted staff from correctional officers to healthcare procedural justice they understood providers they said things like ldquoI got a lot of respect for the rules trusted processes and themrdquo and ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo and ldquothey are just doing their mostly respected staff jobrdquo While prisoners did not describe staff as friends or
advocates neither did they describe them as enemies or opponents This is surprising In many prison settings in which our team has conducted research we have witnessed and documented
40
more adversarial relationships between prisoners and staff with less trust that policies and procedures will be followed devoid of respect expressed in simple phrases like ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo
To be clear prisoners frequently complained about the answers they received to kites the quality of medical care they received and the way some staff treated them But their complaints tended to focus on procedures and policies rather than on individual instances of mistreatment This suggests a baseline of trust in process The idea that rules are transparently knowable and fairl y appl ied is often called procedural justice people who experience procedural justice are more likely to pe rceive rules and institutions as legitimate and therefore to follow those rules and comply with institutional policies13 The baseline of trust ndash and associated perception of procedural justice ndash we documented among IMU prisoners reflects an existing infrastructure and institutional culture that can facilitate further reform like sharing new information and gaining buy -in for new policies and procedures
PROGRAMS ACCESS CHALLENGES AND UNREALIZED POTENTIAL
In our visits to IMUs across Washington over two years and in our conversations with prisoners and staff we learned about a dizzying arr ay of programs available to prisoners in the IMU A2A ACT chemical dependency reading groups and in-cell course work Although prisoners were often eager to participate in these programs both in order to make their IMU time productive and in order to fulfill the requirements for release from the IMU they were frustrated with long program waitlists Prisoners described wait times of six months or more in order to get into programs or courses they were required to take before leaving the IMU They under stood that a variety of factors contributed to these long wait times including time to be transferred to the
designated programming IMU limited Prisoners experienced waiting for I MU- number of seats available for each program based programs as extra punishment and program duration WADOC could communicate more clearly with prisoners about how programming For many participants waiting to get into waitlists are organized and how waiting programs was the most frustrating aspect of affects IMU stays and good time their housing in IMU because they
experienced the wait times as an extra punishment ndash one they feared would extend their overall time in prison ndash actually making the day-to-day conditions of their confinement harder to bear First prisoners worried that they were either losing good time while waiting for programming or receiving additional
13 Tom R Tyler ldquoProcedural Justice Legitimacy and the Effective Rule of Lawrdquo Crime amp J ustice Vol 30 283-357 (2003)
41
punishments by being ldquopushed bac krdquo onto longer wait lists As time spent in the IMU can impact prisonersrsquo early release dates long progr am wai t times wer e pe rceived as an e xtra punishment essentially adding to a prison sentence This is a place where DOC could build on the foundation of trust and procedural justice described in the prior section to simply communicate more clearly with prisoners about how waitlists are constructed and whether and how they are impacting good time and release dates
Second prisoners described the time waiting for programs as not just frustrating because it amounted to more time spe nt in the IMU and sometimes eve n more time in prison but also ldquotaxing mentallyrdquo They described waiting in the IMU as ldquodead time rdquo leaving one prisoner feeling like a ldquodog in a cage rdquo and another feeling ldquoanger all the timerdquo Yet another prisoner described doing the same set of packets three different times while waiting for a spot in face -to-face class like A2A
Once prisoners were able to enroll in programs they often found the content disappointing in specific ways too r epetitious (ldquothe same content over and over againrdquo) not compatible with daily life in the IMU and structured to prior itize a pragmatic attitude over a learning mindset One prisoner described this pragmatic mindset ldquoIf they put them in the Hole ndash they rsquore going to do their Hole time they rsquore going to their little program
WADOC has built an but theyrsquore going to do what they want to do Theyrsquore impressive infrastructure to already set in their ways and nothing rsquos really going to support IMU programming but change themrdquo And another explained ldquoThey force it the content of those programs
upon you which automatically makes an individual want could be improved to be more to rebel rdquo Prisoners also noted the tensions between relevant to IMU prisoners what programs teach and the challenges participants face in the general prison population For many the e mphasis on be havioral change clashed with a prison environment that hindered application of pro-social skills and strategies As one prisoner said ldquo But letrsquos be honest this isnrsquo t ndash it didnt help you didnrsquo t change you nonerdquo Another explained that people often made -up scenarios for role-playing interactions just to complete the program rather than actually engaging with real-life experiences and events
In addition to these general critiques of IMU programs as (1) prioritizing just getting through in order to get out of the IMU and (2) not acknowledging the everyday challenges of prison life prisoners described more specific shortcoming of curricula In some cases prisoners said they had to complete too much of the curriculum alone in their cells ldquoItrsquos meant to be a program where itrsquos supposed to be done with other people where you can sit in a group and talk And they have us do it in our cells So that right there itself I mean how does that work rdquo In other cases prisoners described the programs as loosely adapted from programs designed for juveniles in fact a number of participants had experienced the same curriculum while
42
incarcerated as juveni les Prisoners repeatedly expressed a hope that the curriculum could be more tailored to the adult setting Prisoners also noted that program materials were not always translated for non-English speakers or useful for prisoners who were illiterate In these instances programming was counterproductive to the goals of reform
While participants were critical of the programming they expressed this criticism in the context of wanting to use their IMU time productively being eager for classes and learning opportunities and appreciating the good- faith efforts of DOC in providing programming opportunities Indeed DOC is in a particularly positive position having developed the infrastructure for programming in the IMU the personnel to staff this space and even the interest among prisoners to take advantage of programming Figuring out how to get more meaningful content into this existing infrastructure should be relatively easy compared to the immense work that has already been done to build the infrastructure for and interest in programming among both prisoners and staff
SOCIAL CONTACT POLICIES
In the restrictive c onditions of the IMU one set of policies was both especially troubling to prisoners and especially likely to jeopardize their well-being during and after their IMU placements policy r estrictions on whom they could be in contact with while in the IMU and practical barriers to making contact with even those people on their permitted contact lists
Specifically prisoner s frequently told us that while in the IMU they were only permitted to receive visits from immediate family members parents siblings legal spouses and chi ldren Prisoners understood DOCrsquo s definition of family as excluding unwed partners children prisoners are participating in raisin g who were not legally or biologically their own close friends and other individuals playing important roles in prisonersrsquo lives While there may be
many valid security and management reasons for Prisoners experienced barriers to limiting visitation for IMU residents the immediate -communication ndash especially restricted family-only rules in the IMU impose additional visitation possibilities and limited
layers of isolation on prisoners who have no phone access ndash as some of the
immediate family those who have a strong hardest parts of doing IMU time Both connection with extended family members (eg prisonersrsquo mental health and their re-aunts uncles cousins) and those who have entry prospects deteriorate when
family ties and social bonds fray nurtured strong bonds with friends colleagues or mentors For instance one prisoner participant
who had been in foster care described his frustration with not being able to have a visit with a critical mentor ldquoI have a mentor from the streets who works in a non-profit center for LGBTQ people Hersquo s not my immediate relative so he canrsquo t come here to visit me rdquo Even when
43
prisoners had immediate family who we re e ligible to visit geographic di stance and une xpected lockdowns thwarted visitation plans T he prisoners we interviewed repeatedly identified visitation protocols and distance as two primary factors preventing face -to-face contact with support networks during periods of isolation
Indeed practical barriers including both the location of the IMUs a nd the challenges of regularly accessing the phone in the IMU also disrupted IMU residentsrsquo abilities to maintain connections with their outside support networks While prisoners on mainline may place a phone call throughout various hours each day ndash except for during count and meals ndash telephone access in the IMU is reduced to one hour five times a week during recreational time In the IMU this recreational time varies daily and might not occur at all on certain days of the week Even when prisoners did get into the yard they complained that the phones were unreliable a line would be dead or the person on the other end of the line would not be able to hear them for instance So a prisoner wishing to speak regularly even to an immediate family member l ike a child or spouse might not be able to maintain any kind of consistent communication As one participant described
When I was in isolation last time that put tension [on my marriage] My wife and I were used to having three phone calls a day and we were al ways se nding emails back and forth and getting contact visits on a weekly basis When I got [placed in solitary confinement] little by little I noticed that there was distance growing between us hellip My marriage didnrsquo t work out after that
These rule-based and practical barriers to social contact and the resulting frayed familial and social networks have documented consequences for prisonersrsquo well-being in and out of the IMU Among the random sample of prisoners we interviewed the weaker prisonersrsquo familial attachments the more likely they were to have mental health problems Of those prisoners who reported strong familial attachments only 15 percent had a history of self-harm But of those prisoners who did not report strong familial attachments 85 percent had a history of self -harm14 Indeed our analysis suggests that maintaining social bonds is critical to surviving time in the IMU Strong social bonds both allow prisoners to embody roles as part of social webs beyond that of ldquo convictrdquo and provide material and emotional support advocacy and psychological stability A robust body of social science confirms this finding docume nting how
14 To calculate this we linked histories of self-harm from BPRS and medical records (a yesno binary variable) to interview transcripts In coding in terview transcripts we identified those participants who had described having ldquostrongrdquo family b onds and m aintaining re gular family c ommunications and w e identified those participants who described having limited or no communication with family
44
social bonds facilitate successful re-entry after prison and l ong-term criminal desistance15 In sum facilitating the maintenance of existing social bonds for prisoners in the IMU will likely mitigate the mental health impacts of the restrictive conditions and facilitate more successful re-entry into the general prison population and society
One possible way to facilitate maintenance of social bonds could be through provision of tablets i n the IMU In fact in our year -two interviews prisoners described being able to communicate with the outside world ndash especially with JPAY players they had missed in the IMU ndash as the greatest form of freedom post-IMU During our second-year interviews with prisoners no longer in the IMU several participants we re even compelled to retrieve their JPAY players to show to us The player proved critical to re -entry facilitating immediate contact with prisonersrsquo friends and family Such communication was
IMU prisoners described JPAY players especially important for those whose loved ones as critical to easing their re-entry into lived out of state or could not visit in-person And the general prison population
the JPAY technology especially facilitated Providing some access to tablets in intergenerational communication with younger the IMU could mitigate some of the family members ndash like nieces and nephews ndash who frayed social bonds prisoners are less inclined to handwrite letters or talk on the describe experiencing there phone Former IMU prisoners described writing electronic messages sharing and saving photos and engaging in video calls By providing access to the outside world JPAY players gave prisoners an opportunity to reflect on process and express their experiences to those they cared about most As one participant explained ldquo Like itrsquos easier to text than write than actually ndash lsquo cause yoursquo re able to take a moment reflect on what you want to say than when yoursquore having a conversation So itrsquo s a lot easier It also builds relationshipsrdquo JPAY players were also a source of entertainment for prisoners in (re)constructing their daily routines Being able to listen to music or play games on their devices
15 Cochran JC ldquoBreaches in the wall Imprisonment social support and recidivismrdquo Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 512 (2014) 200-229 Cochran JC and Mears DP ldquoSocial isolation and inmate behavior A conceptual framework for theorizing prison visitation and guiding and assessing researchrdquo Journal of Criminal Justice 414 (2013) 252-261 Liu S Pickett JT and B aker T ldquoInside the black box Prison visitation the costs of offending and inmate social capitalrdquo Criminal Justice Policy Review 278 (2016) 766-790 Martinez DJ and Christian J ldquoThe familial relationships of former prisoners Examining the link between residence and informal support mechanismsrdquo Journal of Contemporary E thnography 382 (2009) 201-224 Mills A and Codd H ldquoPrisoners families and offender management Mobilizing social capitalrdquo Probation Journal 551 (2008) 9-24 Naser RL and La Vigne NG ldquoFamily support in the prisoner reentry process Expectations and realitiesrdquo Journal of Offender Rehabilitation 431 (2006) 93-106 Swanson C Lee CB Sansone FA and Tatum KM ldquoPrisonersrsquo perceptions of father-child relationships and social supportrdquo American Journal of Criminal Justice 373 (2012) 338-355 Wallace D Fahmy C Cotton L Jimmons C McKay R Stoffer S and Syed S ldquoExamining the role of familial support d uring prison and after r elease on post-incarceration mental healthrdquo International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 601 (2016) 3-20
45
helped break up the monotony as prisoners re -adjusted to general population Players also helped prisoners plan for the future whether org anizing their legal or other personal affairs
That said p risoners also described problems with JPAY players For many prisoners the costs of the players and video messaging were prohibitive (even if chea per than travel costs for in- person visits) P risoners who only took advantage of the JPAY kiosks wished for the increased communication with family and friends facilitated by an individual player JPAY expenses create inherent inequities in communication which are in turn likely to affect re -entry J PAY use is also contingent upon technological capacity For instance many participants shared stories of frustration and anxiety when they could not use their player after the prison Wi-Fi went down
In sum the communication and entertainment potentials of tablets make the devices valuable to prisoners adjusting to life outside of the IMU and might also repair social bonds otherwise frayed by IMU placements Acce ss costs and capacity however would have to be addressed in expanding the benefits of tablets to pr isoners during and post-IMU The use of JPAY players (or other tablets) during IMU placement is worth further consideration To be clear tablets are not an appropriate replacement for in- person visitation even in the IMU they simply have potential as an additional resource to further support the social contacts and bonds that mitigate the harms of restrictive housing
HEALTH
Our interviews with IMU prisoners and especially our systematic applica tion of the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale during these interviews established that time in the IMU has significant physical and mental health consequences for prisoners In two articles published in leading public health journals the American Journal of Public He alth and PLOS ONE we detail the mental and physical health consequences of IMU time we include those articles as Appendices D and E respectively and we summarize the fin dings here
First prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of psychiatr ic symptoms suicide attempts and incidents of self-harm and were more
We found high rates of serious mental health than twice as likely to have a serious problems in the IMU mental illness designation as prisoners in
bull 1 in 4 IMU prisoners had clinically significant the general prison population Our initi al symptoms of depression and anxiety sample of 106 participants had a mean bull 1 in 2 IMU prisoners had clinically significant BPRS rating of 37 and a median rati ng of psychiatric distress 33 (out of a possible range from 24 to bull IMU prisoners were 2x as likely as GP 168) suggesting mild psychiatric prisoners to have an SMI designation symptoms among the study population
46
at the time of our interviews Analysis of individual BPRS items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms Further analysis of BPRS factors (measuring 3-4 symptoms commonly associated with one another) as opposed to individual items provided additional evidence of clinically significant psychiatric distress in as much as half of the population sampled as with the depression-anxiety-guilt-somatization (DAGS) factor See Table 2 below for a summary of these findings Importantly the BPRS assesses only symptoms experienced in the last two weeks so BPRS scores may well undercount psychiatric symptoms experienced intermittently over longer periods
Administrative data support the finding of long-term psychological distress Among our respondents 19 percent had serious mental illness (SMI) designations 22 percent had a documented suicide attempt and 18 percent had documentation of other self-harm all at some point during their incarceration either before or during their time in the IMU Moreover respondents with SMI designations were more likely to report positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms than non-SMI respondents (See Table 3 in the AJPH article for more details) These findings support the validity of the BPRS assessments
Qualitative interview data revealed symptoms not otherwise captured by the BPRS and medical files Two classes of symptoms were reported by a majority of respondents toll of being in the IMU (80 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 359 times) and the psychological consequences of social isolation (73 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 192 times) Two additional symptoms were as prevalent as other clinically significant BPRS items like anxiety references to sensory hypersensitivity (16 of respondents mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Given these findings in year two follow-up interviews with prisoner participants we also included PC-PTSD-5 instrument questions to assess the prevalence and severity of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Within the month preceding the interview more than 40 percent of participants (44 of 79) indicated 3 or more symptoms of PTSD the baseline score for establishing a probable PTSD diagnosis As discussed further in the re-entry section below these symptoms of PTSD were closely linked to earlier experiences in the IMU
Second prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of physical health problems associated with their confinement in the IMU In 2017 15 percent of interview participants reported having clinically significant somatic concerns (concerns ldquoover present bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80 respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 percent reported clinically significant ratings of somatic concerns Of those who reported a clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were re-interviewed in 2018 25 percent indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic
47
concerns in 2018 Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 percent reported clinically significant somatic concerns compared to just 8 percent of those housed in the general prison population While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
Table 2 BPRS Symptom and Factor Prevalence 2017 and 2018
2017 (N=106) IMU 2018 (N=28) Non IMU 2018 (N=52) - Symptoms16 Depression 2450 2500 1538
(n=26) (n=7) (n=8) Anxiety 2450 3214 2885
(n=26) (n=9) (n=15) Somatic Concern 1510 2143 769
(n=16) (n=6) (n=4) Guilt 1790 1786 769
(n=19) (n=5) (n=4) Hostility 1130 1786 1731
(n=12) (n=5) (n=9) Hallucinations 940 1429 1154
(n=10) (n=4) (n=6) Excitement 1040 1429 769
(n=11) (n=4) (n=4) Factors17
Positive 1600 1790 1350
(n=17) (n=5) (n=7) Negative 470 360 380
(n=5) (n=1) (n=2) DAGS 4910 4290 4810
(n=52) (n=12) (n=25) Mania 1700 1430 1730
(n=18) (n=4) (n=9)
16 Only clinically significant symptoms (rating of 4 or higher) that were reported by 10 or more of the sample are presented 17 Factors combine 3-4 different symptoms commonly associated with one another Positive = hallucinations unusual thought content and conceptual disorganization Negative = blunted affect emotional withdrawal and motor retardation DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization Mania = elevated mood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement
48
concerns in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 percent confidence level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test)
Data from our 225 initial surveys collected from IMU prisoners also indicated high rates of concerns with physical health among the IMU population Of the 225 survey respondents 63 percent expressed health concerns 48 percent were taking medication 17 percent had arthritis and 8 percent had experienced a fall in solitary confinement And 82 percent replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo while in the IMU
Based on these high rates of reported concerns with physical health both among survey respondents and on the BPRS assessments of interview subjects we systematically analyzed all references to physical health concerns in the prisoner interview transcripts Through this analysis we identified three pervasive physical health concerns among IMU prisoners skin irritations weight fluctuations and musculoskeletal pain
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They understood these conditions as being directly associated with poor air and water quality irritating hygiene products and a lack of sun exposure inherent to IMU conditions of confinement Likewise participants described the interrelationship between a lack of nutritious food or adequate calories in the IMU feelings of lethargy and being too overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day and rapid weight fluctuations experienced during periods spent in the IMU Participants described their weight going down with regular and social exercise routines and going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exercise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations highlight the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU Finally participants spoke frequently about one specific chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to them in the IMU
In addition to specifying these physical health concerns participants described multiple barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU First prisoner respondents worried about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response if staff ultimately deemed
We found common patterns of physical health problems in the IMU bull Skin irritations bull Weight fluctuations bull Musculoskeletal pain
Barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU bull Fear of incurring more IMU time bull Lack of privacy bull $4 co-pay
49
their health issue to be non- emergent This fear prevented them from seeking care even when they were experiencing concern ing symptoms like heart palpitations Second prisoner respondents worried about the lack of privacy available to them if they sought or needed any form of healthcare needing to hand a medical kite to a correctional officer passing by needing to speak with a nurse at ldquocell-frontrdquo in e arshot of other s or submitting to a restrained ldquoescortrdquo to a medical treatment area The lack of privacy was a particular deterrent to seeking mental health care due to stigma around mental illness in prison and fear of b eing targeted by other prisoners as a result of their seeking mental health treatment Third prisoner respondents were dissuaded from seeking care by the $4 co-pay for a non-emergency medical appointment (for non-indigent prisoners) Because of IMU polici es capping overall prisoner spending for any need (whether healthcare food or toiletries) this $4 co-pay represented a larger proportion of their available money in the IMU than in the general population and so represented an additional barrier to seeki ng care from within the IMU Physical and mental health concerns in the IMU might be mitigated and reduced by addressing some of these barriers to IMU residents seeking and accessing care
LONG-TERM MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES IN TH E IMU
While we have focused in much of this section on common and prevalent experiences across our random sample of interview subjects a small subset of the people we interviewed had different experiences in the IMU and presented different challenges to DOC For instance we interviewed IMU pri soners who had re peatedly assaul ted staff repeatedly se riously harmed themselves or repeatedly committed serious rule violations as soon as they were released from the IMU in self-described efforts at sabotage In other words these prisoners r eflect a small group of those with ongoing or severe behavioral challenges DOC officials were actively engaged with following the behavioral trajectories of these prisoners meeting with them individually and investigating options to shorten their time in IMU This is laudable
Another population that presents serious long-Washington is well-positioned to pilot term management challenges for DOC are STG -and promote new initiatives focusing identified prisoners Among the random sample of on viable placement and programming
IMU prisoners we interviewed nearly one -third alternatives for IMU prisoners with (29 percent) had been in the IMU for at least one ongoing severe behavioral challenges year Of these more than half (55 percent) were
STG members or affiliates Of these three were awaiting out- of-state transfer due to ongoing serious STG-related activity Again these are small numbers of prisoners but they represent significant management challenges absorbing DOC time and resources and driving up key restrictive housing metrics like average lengths of stay frequency of cycling in and out of the IMU and the racial disproportionality of IMU placements (see Figures 8 and 9 above)
50
To date much solitary confinement reform nationwide has ignored such difficult cases focusing instead on the more widespread over-use of solitary confinement for prisoners who have not committed serious rule violations as with prisoners serving indefinite solitary confinement terms in California prisons due to gang status labels (prior to the Ashker reforms) or prisoners who have spent extended terms in solitary confinement for non-serious or single infractions Having successfully reduced IMU populations (albeit with some fluctuations) and lengths of IMU terms Washington is well-positioned to pilot and promote new initiatives focusing on viable placement and programming alternatives for IMU prisoners with ongoing severe behavioral challenges As Washington officials know too well no single solution is likely to address the wide range of behavioral challenges among those individuals who have experienced repeated extended IMU placements
One commonality we noticed among IMU ldquolong-termersrdquo was that they often felt they had nothing (more) to lose through misbehavior whether they had histories of serious violence against themselves or others To the extent Washington officials are able to provide hope and resources to these prisoners these prisonersrsquo calculations about the desirability of violence shift For instance providing one IMU prisoner with a nerf ball to throw another with soap to carve and scheduling weekly headquarter check-ins with a third at least anecdotally reduced misbehavior and violence In future research we look forward to further analyzing both these specific cases and broader DOC efforts to address individual and group behavioral challenges
RE-ENTRY
IMU prisoners overwhelmingly looked forward to being released back into the general prison population They associated re-entering the general population with improved access to clothing food hygiene products exercise programming and medical care And transitioning back to the general population offered opportunities to feel ldquohumanrdquo again ldquoWell it allows you to have contact It allows you to be human It allows you to see what people do on a daily basis that come from the field or to work and allow me to sub-act that Allowing you to copy what is considered humanrdquo
But re-entry came with challenges and anxieties too Prisoners reported significant difficulty readjusting to regular social contact upon leaving solitary confinement Transitioning to multiple-person housing or a particularly bustling unit is challenging to navigate after having extremely limited interactions with people for months or years Something as simple as shaking hands represents a significant amount of contact for someone just released from IMU Prisoners also develop different privacy expectations while in isolation which can make re-entry feel like a ldquothousand eyes are watching yourdquo Re-adjusting to life in general population also entailed a level of choice and personal
51
responsibility not typically exercised in isolation prisoners described the challen ges of anticipating transfer to a new location figuring out the day -to-day processes of their new unit and acclimating to the work and social norms of a new group of correctional staff and fellow prisoners Transitioning back into the general population with new norms and fewer restrictions disrupted the consistent (and sometimes rigid) routines prisoners had developed to manage their time in solitary confinement
BPRS and PTSD scores confirmed ongoing Mental health symptoms experienced challenges with the mental health problems in the IMU persisted after release prisoners experienced in the IMU For along with new symptoms indicative instance in year -two interviews of PTSD Former IMU prisoners
therefore face ongoing mental health respondents not in the IMU experienced needs and challenges higher rates of clinically significant anxiety
(as scored through the BPRS) than they had in the IMU (See Table 2 above) And prisoners in our study not in the IMU in year two frequently described extreme sensitivity to any amount of noise feeling overwhelmed by the amount of movement and stimulation they experience d in the general population intrusive thoughts (like triggered memories and flashbacks) and an inability to stop experiencing symptoms of guilt and blame Each of these experiences are consistent with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) While IMU p risoners were often just trying to make it through upon release back into the ge neral prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and physical challenges first experienced in the IMU The l ack of sensor y stimulation and social interaction in the IMU seemingly promotes rumination and fixation on traumatic disturbing or distressing memories and this rumination lingers even after leaving the IMU
One prisoner respondentrsquo s description of this constellation of symptoms which make the transition from the IMU to the general prison population difficult is representa tive
When you isolate us you kind of deprive us of those sensories everyday you know Like since Irsquove been here hellip Irsquo ve noticed like loud noise makes me feel I donrsquo t like it If therersquo s too much stuff going on I find myself I get all irritated If ther ersquos a l ot of people I ge t weirded out if the rersquos too much activity going on I kind of canrsquo t be around it Itrsquo s just it paranois me I donrsquot know why Itrsquo s only happened since Irsquo ve been in here this time I think itrsquo s because Irsquo ve been isolated for as long a s I have been Things that Irsquom not used to k ind of throws me through a loop
Likewise staff described how they observed these adjustment difficulties in prisoners leaving the IMU
52
I think theyrsquore uncomfortable being out of restraints around people hellip I donrsquot think they know what to do For example I used to watch them come out of IMU and in general population housing unit theyrsquod come to me and it would be strange for them to hellip have somebody walk up and say ldquoHey man howrsquos it goingrdquo and touch them Theyrsquore not used to people touching them hellip All that noise and all those people around them and having to share a cell with somebody and have somebody so close theyrsquore not used to that Those are effects of long-term restrictive housing I think they improve but ndash I mean Irsquove watched that happen over and over again
Prisoners contemplating release from the IMU not into the general prison population but instead onto the streets experienced significant anxiety about this looming transition As one prisoner described
Most people get released to the streets get a chance to go to hellip at least get out of the hole because they donrsquot want to release people to the streets from the hole because that causes safety risks For me they donrsquot have any options hellip My DOC officer is coming to pick me up itrsquos not like I wanted it to happen but hersquoll probably put me in handcuffs until I get to the office and actually wait to release me because until Irsquom out of their custody Irsquom still a security risk18
While we know DOC sought to ensure prisoners transitioned from the IMU into general population prior to release to the streets this was not possible in every case Understanding the challenges prisoners experience upon leaving the IMU and their anxieties about release are therefore especially important to designing transition and release plans
Our analysis shows that solitary confinement produces a unique cluster of mental health symptoms ndash including but not limited to cognitive decline anxiety depression hallucinations and PTSD19 Our interviews revealed an additional layer of difficulty for prisoners reentering the
18 While we sought to interview prisoners who had paroled between our year-one and year-two interviews we were not able to make contact with any of these individuals and so cannot systematically analyze actual experiences of release-to-the streets
19 Arrigo B A amp Bullock J L (2008) The psychological effects of solitary confinements on prisoners in supermax units Reviewing what we know and recommending what should change International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 52(6) 622-640 doi 1011770306624X07309720 Grassian S (2006) Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Washington Journal of Law amp Policy 22 325ndash383 Grassian S amp Friedman N (1986) Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confinement International Journal of
53
general prison population (and mainstream society) from the IMU The more time a person spends in solitary confinement the more difficult their transition back into the general prison population Importantly our analyses of rates of IMU placement in DOC (discussed in particular in the first findings section of this report on patterns in restrictive housing use) suggest that (1) large numbers of prisoners experience IMU placements during their stay in DOC and (2) many prisoners cycle in and out of the IMU This suggests that these long -term effects of IMU placements may be common if not pervasive among DOC prisoners
In sum prisoners described and sta ff observed common challenges transitioning from the IMU back into the general prison population or back onto the streets Still those prisoners who had spent extended periods of time (years rather than months) in the IMU but who were ulti mately able to transition back into the gene ral prison populati on descr ibed significantly impr oved quality of life and well-being in their new surroundings
For instance our team interviewed one prisoner who spent a total of one year in the IM U When our team re -interviewed this prisone r i n 2018 he was at a camp at the lowest security level in the system grateful for his ldquofreedom rdquo back in communication with his family and feeling ready for his looming release date (within the year of the interview ) ldquoEverythingrsquos turned around real fast from being in the cell to just being almost like out in the world Theyre just letting you know that Im getting closer and closer to finally getting outrdquo Our team interviewed another prisoner who spent a total of two years in the IMU during which time he had no contact with his family and had engaged in repeated serious self-harm resulting in multiple surgeries When our team re -interviewed this prisoner in 2018 he was living in the general prison population with a cellmate had re -established a relationship with his young daughter While prisoners face ongoing mental
and her mother and had not engaged in self-harm health needs following IMU stays
in months many also appreciate increased family connections exhibit better behavior
In many cases prisoners pointed to a specific staff and experience overall improvements member who had gotten to know them expressed in well-being after leaving the IMU concern for their well-being and advocated for targeted interventions like family contact or transitional programs to facilitate transitioning out of the IMU Such targeted individualized treatment interventions often coordinated by Program Managers at the institution- level or the Mission Housing Administrator from
Law and P sychiatry 8(1) 49-65 Haney C amp Lynch M (1997) Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and so litary c onfinement New York Review of Law and Social Change 23 101-195
54
headquarters were critical to intervening to get some of the longer-term IMU prisoners back into the general prison population For instance one Program Manager said
I follow up with all of my offenders When they leave and go to the other institution after theyrsquove been out of here for three months Irsquoll go and visit them at their other institutions and see how theyrsquore doing Wersquove had a couple thatrsquove gone through the program twice and a lot of people are looked down on that and go lsquoOh if they didnrsquot learn the first time why is he going to learn a second timersquo Well hey it might take somebody four or five times before they get it Especially if theyrsquore between that 28 to 38 age range
Likewise the Mission Housing Administrator who follows individual maximum-custody IMU placements throughout the entire Washington DOC system noted ldquoWe have hundreds of success stories of people who have gotten out of IMUsrdquo He said he ldquoget(s) calls from moms every once in awhilerdquo thanking him for giving their sons a chance by letting them out of the IMU And he added he has ldquoa drawer full of letters from people saying thank yourdquo
Such stories stand as important reminders that even prisoners once thought to be unmanageable can improve outside of the IMU and learn to thrive in our communities even in spite of the many documented mental health challenges associated with having spent time in solitary confinement
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021
While data collection for this research project formally concluded in 2018 reform efforts within Washington DOC continued The Mission Housing Administrator continued to oversee all cases of long-term maximum custody IMU placements and to develop individualized interventions ndash from regular phone calls and exchanges of letters to facilitating more family contact ndash to assist in transitioning people out of the IMU Between 2018 and 2020 Washington DOC partnered with the Vera Institute of Justice to pursue further restrictive housing reform (and also joined a partnership with AMEND to improve overall correctional culture)20 In 2021 Vera Institute reported that overall restrictive housing use decreased by nearly ten percent between 2018
20 See PRESS RELEASE The Washington State Department of Corrections Partners with the Vera Institute to Focus on Restricted Housing Reforms May 16 2019 httpswwwdocwagovnews201905162019phtm
55
and 2020 and average and medium lengths of stay in IMU on maximum custody status decreased significantly by 18 and 33 percent respectively 21
Although the onset of COVID in early 2020 set som e of Washington DOC continues these restrictive housing reduction efforts back Washingt on to develop and implement DOC continues to implement additional reforms designed to strategies to reduce reliance
(1) further reduce reliance on restrictive housing on restrictive housing and (eliminating the sanction of disciplinary segregation improve conditions of shortening the maximum time in administrative segregation confinement in IMUs from 47 to 30 days implementing ldquoearned time creditsrdquo for
people assigned to maximum custody and piloting new hearings processes to divert ser iously mentally ill prisoners from restrictive housing ) and (2) improve conditions of confinement within restrictive housing units (increasing out- of-cell time implementing plans to t rack these increases through a program called Pipe permitting a broader range of visitors beyond immediate family and notifying emergency contacts when prisoners are placed in restrictive housing) In addition to these reforms Washington DOC has been and plans to continue ldquore -purposingrdquo IMU units for other less restrictive ldquomissionsrdquo like ldquosafe harborrdquo units for gang dropouts transition units for people moving between IMU and general population and a potential unit for people with traumatic brain injur ies As the Mission Housing Administrator said ldquowe are trying to take r estrictive housing beds away so they canrsquo t be filledrdquo 22
DOC has also been working to address IMU staff concerns DOC established a Steering Committee in 2018 including line staff m ental health professionals and correctional managers to help to develop and implement IMU -related policies By including line staff t his Committee directly addresses staff desi res documented in this repor t to be hear d and to have more input in IMU -related policy decisions In addition DOC developed a training handbook especially for IMU staff and now requires staff with IMU posts to complete a training program associated with this handbook within 6 months of beginning work in an IMU In sum DOC has
21 Rachel Friedrich ldquoWashington Corrections Continues Restrictive Housing Reformsrdquo Oct 28 2020 httpswwwdocwagovnews202010282020htm see a lso Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author)
22 See Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author) conversation with Tim Thrasher Feb 19 2021 (notes on file with author)
56
laid a strong groundwork from which to continue to implement many of the recommendations identified in the executive summary to this report
57
APPENDICES
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL
Legend 5 MaxIMU 4 OthIMU 3 Max SOUITP 2 Max Other
1 GP 0 UNK
IMU SOU CBCC OTH FIELD UNK PRISON
4 MAX 5 3 3 2 0 0
CUSTODY 3 CLO 4 1 1 1 1 1
LEVEL 2 MED 4 1 1 1 1 1
1 OTH 4 1 1 1 1 1
0 UNK 4 0 0 0 0 0
G17 Custody Population by Index Location and Custody Level
IMU SOU CBCC OTH PRISN FIELD UNK TOTALS
4 MAX 342 30 22 18 0 0 412
CUSTODY 3 CLO 77 56 400 988 32 0 1553
LEVEL 2 MED 103 74 43 3441 43 0 3704
1 OTH 69 149 16 10811 550 0 11595
0 UNK 12 0 0 470 146 51 679
TOTALS 603 309 481 15728 771 51 17943
58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020
1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020
Local RH Units AHCC
CRCC
TRU
WCCW
WSR-3a
WSR-3
WSP-4
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
0
80
101
64
0
0
40
0
80
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
0
0
40
0
0
0
Local RH Units Total
397 397 325 285 273 172 172 142
IMUs (Ad Seg Beds) CBCC-IMU
MCC-IMU
MICC-IMU
SCCC-IMU
WCC-IMU
WSP-IMU (N)
WSP-IMU (S)
CRCC IMU
124(62)
0
64(0)
0
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
100(100)
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
100(70)
IMUs Total 408 552 552 952 888 888 740 770
Sum Local RH + IMUs
805 949 877 1237 1163 1060 912 912
59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE
See next page
60
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher-Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Journal Justice Quarterly
Manuscript ID RJQY-2020-0181R2
Manuscript Type Original Article
Keywords Restrictive housing Solitary confinement Gangs Prison
The Version of Record of this manuscript has been published and is available in Justice Quarterly published online Dec 21 2020 httpsdoiorg1010800741882520201853800
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
Page 1 of 29 Justice QuarterlyTable 1 Washington DOC Population Characteristics 2002-2017
Cohort 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Age at Snapshot (in Years) 18 to 25 21 19 17 16 13 11 26 to 35 33 33 32 34 35 34 36 to 45 29 29 28 25 26 27 Over 45 17 20 23 25 27 28
Gender Female 7 8 8 8 8 8
Male 93 92 92 93 92 92 RaceEthnicity
White Non-Hispanic 60 63 62 60 61 60 Black Non-Hispanic 21 19 19 19 18 18
Hispanic 12 10 11 12 13 14 OtherUnknown 7 8 9 9 9 9
Most Serious Offense at Conviction Violent Non-Sex 41 42 44 46 46 48
Sex 17 17 20 20 20 19 Property 15 17 18 19 20 19
DrugOther 25 23 18 15 14 13 Missing 2 1 0 0 0 0
Sentence Length (in Months) Mean 879 891 948 998 1017 1009
Standard Deviation 1048 1071 1121 1173 1204 1246 Gang Affiliation by RacialEthnic STG
White 5 5 6 6 5 5 Black 9 9 9 10 10 10
Hispanic 4 5 6 8 9 9 Other 1 1 2 2 2 2
No Gang Affiliation 81 80 78 75 74 74
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17308 17288 17625 17943 Source Authorsrsquo Calculations Washington State Department of Corrections
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
For Peer ReviewOnly
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
350
Justice Quarterly Page 2 of 29
Figure 1 Percentage Change in IMU-Max Population IMU-Max Length of Stay (LOS) and Total Prison Population (Indexed at 2002) Washington DOC 2002-2017
100
150
200
250
300
Perc
enta
ge C
hang
e fr
om 2
002
50
0 2002
(=100) 2005 2008
Snapshot Year 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max Population IMU-Max LOS Total Prison Population
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
48495051525354555657585960
1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647
Page 3 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Table 2 Solitary Confinement in Washington State 2002-2017
2002 Num
Custody amp Confinement Level IMU-Max 149 09
IMU-AdDSeg 105 07 Max-Tx 18 01
Other-Max 34 02 General Population 15499 974
Out of StateUnknown 102 06
2005 Num
228 14 144 09 50 03 55 03
16270 965 105 06
Cohort 2008 2011
Num Num
338 20 472 27 337 19 177 10 44 03 35 02 11 01 27 02
16438 950 16440 951 140 08 137 08
2014 Num
283 16 291 17 42 02 20 01
16893 958 96 05
2017 Num
342 19 260 14 52 03 18 01
17121 954 150 08
Total IMU Total Maximum Custody
254 201
16 13
372 333
22 20
675 393
39 23
649 534
38 31
574 345
33 20
602 412
34 23
Cumulative Days Spent in IMU (Any Custody Status)dagger
Mean (St Dev) 431 (2115) 476 (2303) 562 (2568) 746 (3027) 804 (3271) 824 (3300)
Not placed in IMU 1-45 days
46-90 days 91-365 days
366 days or more (gt1 year) At least 1 day in IMU
12062 2128 499 728 490
3845
758 134 31 46 31 242
12673 2344 487 755 593
4179
752 139 29 45 35 248
12533 2606 583 890 695
4774
724 151 34 51 40 276
12120 2535 610
1041 981
5167
701 147 35 60 57 299
11863 2854 810
1050 1048 5762
673 162 46 60 59 327
11847 2985 928
1075 1108 6096
660 166 52 60 62 340
Days in IMU by Custody and Confinement Level Mean (St Dev)
IMU-Max IMU-AdDSeg
2270 1147
(1362) (1246)
3060 1169
(2392) (1212)
2839 906
(1929) (1169)
3477 1278
(2732) (1385)
3258 664
(3167) (779)
2140 709
(1296) (796)
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17307 17287 17625 17943
Source Authorsrsquo calculations Washington State Department of Corrections Changes in the use of local segregation for disciplinary and administrative purposes (outside of IMUs for prisoners classified lower than Max Custody) likely affect the counts of IMU-AdDSeg populations particularly in early cohort years Total IMU is the sum of all prisoners living in IMU units on July 1st including (i) IMU-Max those on maximum custody housed in IMUs and (ii) IMU-AdDSeg those who are housed in IMUs on lower custody levels including administrative segregation disciplinary segregation and awaiting hearings Total Maximum Custody consists of three groups all classified as maximum custody (i) those housed in IMUs (IMU-Max) (ii) those in SOU or ITP units (Max-Tx) and (iii) those located elsewhere (Other-Max) dagger Days spent in IMU represents cumulative days spent in IMU until the snapshot date for all prisoners regardless of custody classification during their current prison admission
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Justice Quarterly Page 4 of 29Table 3 Comparison of IMU-Max and General Prison Populations Washington DOC 2002-2017
Cohort 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2 IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen 3 Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop4
Background Characteristics 6 Age at Snapshot (Years) 7 18 to 25 36 21 24 19 31 16 24 15 19 13 20 11 8 9
26 to 35 36 to 45
40 17
33 29
40 22
32 29
43 15
32 29
45 18
34 26
41 20
34 26
47 20
34 27
11 Over 45 7 17 13 20 12 23 13 25 19 27 13 29 12 RaceEthnicity13 14
Black Non-Hispanic Hispanic
19 20
21 11
16 22
19 10
15 30
19 10
20 29
19 12
14 37
18 12
17 27
18 13
16 OtherUnknown 13 7 8 8 6 9 7 9 5 9 9 9 17 White Non-Hispanic 48 60 55 63 49 62 44 61 44 62 47 60 18 Most Serious Offense at 19 Conviction
21 22
Violent Non-Sex Sex
68 15
41 17
66 14
42 17
70 9
43 20
74 11
45 21
78 8
45 20
75 7
48 20
23 Property 8 16 10 17 14 19 11 19 10 20 11 20 24 DrugOther 9 25 9 23 7 18 4 16 4 14 7 13
Missing26 Age of First Conviction
1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 (Years)28 29 Under 18
18 to 25
12 69
4 45
9 69
3 45
10 69
3 45
10 65
3 46
8 67
3 46
8 69
3 45
31 Over 25 20 51 22 52 21 52 25 51 25 51 23 52 32 In-Prison Behavioral Profile 33 Gang Affiliation by34 RacialEthnic STG
36 37
White Black
14 22
4 9
21 14
5 9
20 12
5 9
15 14
5 10
15 11
5 10
14 16
4 10
38 Hispanic 21 4 22 4 39 5 33 7 40 8 32 8 39 Other 3 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 4 2 4 2
41 No Gang Affiliation 40 81 43 81 28 79 36 76 31 75 33 76
42 Annual Infraction Rate 43 44 Mean 83 13 51 11 53 11 42 10 47 10 49 11
St Dev 76 24 78 18 54 20 49 17 59 18 67 19 46 Violent Infractions 47 48 Mean 40 05 33 04 33 05 30 05 33 05 30 05
49 St Dev 58 15 45 14 42 15 40 16 43 16 34 16 Staff Assaults
51 52 53
Mean St Dev
12 33
01 04
07 22
00 04
07 20
00 04
07 21
01 05
08 25
01 05
06 20
01 05
54 Total Population 149 15499 228 16270 338 16438 472 16440 283 16893 342 17121
56 Source Authors calculations Washington State Department of Corrections 57 Statistically significant differences between IMU-Max and General Population (Gen Pop) at plt001 (for categorical chi square for 58 numeric t-test) 59
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 5 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher -Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Abstract This article presents a rare longitudinal analysis of solitary confinement use in one state prison system spanning 2002-2017 in the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) An ongoing partnership with DOC officials facilitated methodological and conceptual improvements allowing us to construct a dataset that provides a rich description of who is in solitary confinement for how long and why Operationalizing solitary confinement as the intersection of the most serious custody status with the most restrictive housing location we describe significant changes in ethnic composition and behavioral profiles of people in solitary confinement and in frequency and duration of solitary confinement use These results suggest how particular policy interventions have affected the composition numbers and lengths of stay in solitary confinement Combining longitudinal analysis and iterative engagement with DOC officials we provide a roadmap for better understanding solitary confinement use in the United States now and in the future
Tens of thousands of prisoners across the United States experience solitary confinement
annually (ASCA-Liman 2015 2018 Beck 2015) Prisoners generally spend no more than an
hour per day outside of cells the size of a wheelchair-accessible bathroom stall and eat cold
meals alone with limited access to natural light phones family visits or any human touch
Prisoners live not days but months and years under such conditions In tandem with mass
incarceration the use of solitary confinement expanded drastically across the United States in the
1980s and 1990s often in modern hyper-secure ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities (Reiter 2016 Riveland
1999 Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Though integral to incarceration since the prison was ldquobornrdquo and
perpetually controversial (Foucault 1977 Haney amp Lynch 1997 Smith 2006 Rubin amp Reiter
2018) solitary confinement has come under renewed scrutiny in the last decade (Reiter 2018
ASCA-Liman 2015) Federal and state correctional systems have begun to experiment with
mitigation and alternative programs Here we focus on a 15-year period during which the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) attempted to confront these issues and ask
whether and how a prison system might reduce its use of solitary confinement
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Justice Quarterly Page 6 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
The question of whether a prison system might change direction including how the
practice of solitary confinement might be constrained has animated criminological scholarship
over decades (eg Jacobs 1977 Liebling 1999 Petersilia 1991 Rhodes 2004 Reiter 2016
Rubin amp Reiter 2018) A longitudinal quantitative dataset with which to assess these questions
however is rare Our dataset analyzed in collaboration with practitioner partners allows us to
look both at individual faFor Peer Review Only ctors such as how many gang members with violent infraction histories
are placed in solitary confinement for how long in any given year and at institutional factors
including demographic shifts and policy changes which influence behavioral patterns (Toch
1977 Liebling 1999 Toch amp Adams 1989 Haney 2018)
Where scholars have used point-in-time datasets to examine the relationship between
individual and institutional factors in understanding the use and effects of solitary confinement
controversies abound over how to define and operationalize the practice (Kurki amp Morris 2001
Naday et al 2008 Mears et al 2019 Reiter 2016) We identify which prisoners are subjected
to the aversive conditions described above in terms of two factors 1) whether they are living in
units engineered to lock them down (location) and 2) the rules governing how long they stay
their conditions of confinement and movement (custody status) Here these measurement
principles are applied to a rich administrative dataset to ask 1 Who is in solitary confinement
for how long and why 2 How if at all do their individual characteristics including ethnicity
gang status and b ehavioral profiles change over time 3 What patterns emerge from this
analysis We show how the distribution and extent of solitary confinement use in Washington
has shifted with institutional vicissitudes in demographics capacity gang management policies
programming and classification systems
Trajectories of Solitary Confinement Placement
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Page 7 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Estimates of how many people experience solitary confinement annually range from
68000 prisoners to 18 of all prisoners in the United States or over 250000 people (ASCA-
Liman 2015 Beck 2015) To address definitional debates underlying conflicting estimates
Mears et al recently suggested a four-dimensional conceptual framework ndash goal duration
quality and intentionality ndash to describe the constellation of factors that make up solitary
confinement (or ldquorestric
o define solitary confinement a
conceptually and et
For Peer Review Only tive housingrdquo) practices (2019 1434) The operational focus of our
alternative approach allows us to bypass arguments about how t
hically controversial practice Rather our operational definition applies the
near-universal correctional functions of classification and movement to identify the sites and
subjects of solitary confinement from correctional tracking records These methods permit
consistent robust a nalyses of who is subjected to solitary confinement and the association of this
experience with institutional misconduct and other factors
Previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions about whether solitary confinement
has a disparate impact on groups defined by race or ethnicity Studies focusing on patterns in
disciplinary infractions and solitary confinement placements over four to six years tend to find
minimal disparities (Cochran et al 2018 Tasca amp Turanovic 2018) while point-in-time
comparisons of demographics of solitary confinement units with general population units
consistently find non-white prisoners over-represented in solitary confinement (Schlanger 2012
Reiter 2012) A recent study analyzed a survey that asked state prison systems to self-report
solitary confinement and gang-affiliated populations prisoners classified as gang members were
over-represented in solitary confinement across the United States (Pyrooz amp Mitchell 2019)
The study does not m ention race but others have noted the longstanding ties between race and
gangs in US prisons (Berger 2014 Bloom amp Martin 2013 Reiter 2016) strengthening Pyrooz
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Justice Quarterly Page 8 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and Mitchellrsquos recommendation to ldquointegrate measures of gang affiliation into correctional
researchrdquo (2019 22) as we do in our analysis
The relationship between solitary confinement and institutional order is also contested (eg
Briggs Sundt and Castellano 2003 Lovell Johnson amp Cain 2007) One recent study among
men in a three-year cohort in a mid-western DOC found that disciplinary segregation was
associated with a greater probability of misconduct (Labrecque amp Smith 2019) but another
study among men in a two-year cohort in the Oregon DOC found that disciplinary segregation
was not a significant predictor of subsequent institutional misconduct (Lucas amp Jones 2017)
Our dataset permits an evaluation of longer-term patterns of misconduct in and out of solitary
settings
One recent study expanded the usual short periods of analysis described in preceding studies
about both race and misconduct using nearly a decade (1987-96) of data from Kansas a prison
system small enough (5-7000 prisoners) to allow tracing of bed-level data to examine individual
correlates of solitary confinement placement such as race and also patterns in frequency and
duration of solitary confinement over time (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Our study takes an even
broader scale approach examining populations in and out of solitary confinement over 15 years
with 15000 or more prisoners per cohort following particular individuals and groups over
decades of criminal and correctional history
Attending to broader institutional forces at play over our study period is critical to our
approach Lynch recently argued that in studies of sentencing findings are often
ldquooperationalized as a single end-stage outcome that is unmoored from the social organizational
and institutional forces that help produce a class of defendants to be sentencedrdquo (2020 1159)
This critique could just as readily be applied to studies of solitary confinement (eg Cochran et
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Page 9 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
al 2018 Logan et al 2017) in which disparities in outcomes and differences in personal and
behavioral characteristics of prisoners are analyzed with limited attention to institutional patterns
such as fluctuations in bed capacity shifts in demographic make-up and reforms or
retrenchments in policies governing solitary confinement placement and release Our
longitudinal dataset allows us to generate individual-level and aggregate statistics on histories
and outcomes during incarceration and to place findings in the context of broader institutional
forces shaping those patterns
The administrative dataset analyzed here was collected as part of a multi-method project also
using ethnographic interview and archival data to evaluate solitary confinement use over time
in Washington (DOC) (Reiter et al 2020) This project extends a decades-long collaborative
relationship between researchers and DOC first between the University of Washington (UW)
and DOC through the Mental Health Collaboration (Allen et al 2001) later in a UW-led multi-
method systematic survey of Washingtonrsquos solitary confinement population in 1999-2000
(Lovell et al 2000 Rhodes 2004 Lovell 2008) and finally in this study replicating and
extending the 2000 study in collaboration with an original member of both previous studies
In rates of overall incarceration and solitary confinement use Washington DOC is below
average it has the 12th lowest rate of incarceration among the states (Kaeble amp Cowhig 2018)
and as of 2018 its reported proportion of population in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo (23) was half the
national average (45) (ASCA-Liman 2018 13)1 In terms of willingness to collaborate with
researchers however Washington DOC is above average current and former DOC leadership
have agreed there are knowledge gaps around solitary confinement invited scholars and
advocates alike to analyze and critique policies in order to address these gaps and participated
actively in collaborations both facilitating access to the administrative data underlying the
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Justice Quarterly Page 10 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
analyses presented here and helping to interpret results In particular Eldon Vail and Dan
Pacholke nationally recognized correctional policy experts led Washington DOC during part of
our study period and consulted with us on interpretation of findings
Research about solitary confinement use has been produced through practitioner-researcher
collaborations in a number of states including Colorado (OrsquoKeefe et al 2011) Florida (Mears
amp Bales 2009) Kansas (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) and Oregon (Pyrooz et al 2020) Few
however have attempted the quantitative and qualitative depth of this project which is more
comparable to the New York studies of Toch and colleagues (eg Toch amp Adams 1989 Toch
1977) conducted as the new ldquosupermaxrdquo era was coming upon us in the 1980s or the California
studies by Petersilia on re-entry and community supervision (eg Petersilia 2009) Ours
represents an intergenerational academic-practitioner collaboration spanning both eras
Data and Methods
This analysis draws on a longitudinal administrative record set of the entire DOC
population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and
2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of admissions and
releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12 million) infractions
(630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) Discussions with DOC research office
partners about how best to meet the data needs of our study exemplifying our academic-
practitioner collaboration led to two major expansions of the scope and power of this dataset
First to assess how solitary confinement populations had changed since the 2000 UW study
we requested archival information on prisoners in any form of solitary confinement on our
snapshot dates Lacking ready capacity to identify these prisoners DOC offered to provide data
for all prisoners in custody on these dates leaving it to us to identify who was in solitary
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Page 11 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
confinement and when Our willingness to pick our own apples from the DOC data tree led to a
30-fold expansion of our subject pool permitting longitudinal comparisons between solitary
confinement and general population prisoners Second DOC provided us all Washington prison
sentences in the entire history of prisoners in our vastly expanded dataset rather than only the
index offense data we had requested Although information about currently active convictions
accompanies prisoners as they move through DOC retrospectively retrieving links between court
and correctional records is complicated by the multiplicity of charges sentencing policies and
admission statuses that may apply Recognizing a systematic problem when we showed them a
pattern of missing data DOC provided the entire prison conviction history for the 57000 prisoners
in our expanded subject population allowing us both to identify the most serious current offense
and to provide a consistent measure of prisonersrsquo criminal histories
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying uniform coding procedures to
compile event-level data into a subject-level dataset We computed the facility location and
custody status of every prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at
each location and subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as
infractions Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and
plausible counts and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all
prisoners in six snapshot cohorts We also use some inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-
tests) in the analyses we present to test for differences across cohorts and groups
Terminology In Washington DOC policy (2020 320250) maximum custody status is the
highest level of custody classification Maximum custody prisoners are assessed in formal
hearings to pose a sufficient risk to safety ndash whether their own or others ndash to warrant holding
them for an extended period in a maximum-security location isolated by architecture procedure
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Justice Quarterly Page 12 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and staffing As legal expert Fred Cohen notes maximum custody is a risk-based classification
justified as a preventive measure rather than a punitive sanction (2008) In Washington DOC
prisoners first enter solitary confinement through short-term administrative segregation (Ad-
Seg) placements usually awaiting adjudication following an infraction Infraction of a specific
prison rule may result in a disciplinary hearing and the sanction of a disciplinary segregation (D-
Seg) placement Alternatively multiple infractions other behavior patterns or an extended stay
in administrative segregation may lead to a re-classification as maximum custody (Max)
In DOC Intensive Management Units (IMUs) are the most secure housing facilities The
term ldquosupermaxrdquo is not a category of institution in DOC instead the state has five IMUs located
at Clallam Bay Corrections Center (CC) Monroe CC Washington CC (ldquoSheltonrdquo) Stafford
Creek CC and the Washington State Penitentiary (called Walla Walla or the ldquoconcrete mamardquo
(Hoffman amp McCoy 2018)) IMUs feature distinct security perimeters with advanced
technology for controlling entrances gates and doors strict procedures for prisoner movement
and no normal occasions for prisoners to share space with others unless shackled Though exact
conditions (like cell size and degree of access to natural light) vary across IMUs the uniformly
restrictive conditions impose intense isolation (often for extended periods of time) comparable to
conditions in other state supermaxes IMUs are adjacent to the ldquomain institutionrdquo (a correctional
center or complex may have multiple facilities or stand-alone buildings sharing a common
Superintendent) to allow escorting prisoners on foot without delay As a Lieutenant at Shelton
said during a prison visit ldquoNothing happens fast around here except going to the IMUrdquo
Transfers between facilities are recorded in DOCrsquos movement records allowing us to
identify who was placed in IMUs and for how long Transfers in and out of cells within a facility
however are recorded as housing changes likely 50 million in number for our subjects vastly
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Page 13 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
exceeding our and DOCrsquos ability to retrieve and compile absent unlimited resources2 Therefore
inter-facility movement records in our data do not capture prisoners isolated on Ad-Seg or D-Seg
status (AdDSeg status) inside a main institution Importantly AdDSeg prisoners who were
living under comparably stringent conditions as IMU-Max prisoners in two decrepit segregation
units within the main institutions at two of Washingtonrsquos oldest prisons ndash Walla Walla and
Monroe ndash are not captured in our data These two units with a combined capacity of 250 closed
in 2011 but were replaced (and then some) by 200 new IMU beds at each prison Our inability
to identify all such AdDSeg prisoners through movement records requires caution in how the
terms ldquoIMUrdquo versus ldquosolitary confinementrdquo are used in our findings Because of this limitation
we center our trend and comparative analyses on the maximum custody group who are reliably
identified over the entire course of our study period and whose long-term presence in maximum
security settings raises the sharpest ethical issues (Lovell 2014)
Results
To contextualize findings on the size and characteristics of Washingtonrsquos solitary
confinement population we first describe overall patterns in the state prison population between
2002 and 2017 Table 1 displays counts and demographic crime type sentence length and gang
affiliation characteristics for the entire prison population incarcerated on each of the six snapshot
dates Washington Statersquos prison population grew by 13 despite changes in sentencing policy
(SHB2338 2002) that were expected to reduce imprisonment by lessening penalties and
providing treatment alternatives for drug-related offenses The proportion of prisoners
incarcerated for drug or other offenses declined substantially while those incarcerated for
violent non-sexual offenses increased by nearly 17 between 2002 and 2017 (plt001)3
Reflecting the shift toward more violent offenses average sentence lengths increased
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Justice Quarterly Page 14 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
significantly as did the average age of prisoners The proportion of Hispanic prisoners increased
by 17 while the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners decreased by 16 (plt001) and
White non-Hispanic representation remained stable4
Affiliation with security threat groups (STG) or prison gangs increased as well in 2017
over one in four prisoners (26) was identified as a member of an STG up from 19 in 2002
The growth of gang affiliation was not equally distributed across racial and ethnic groups5
While rates of gang affiliation for White non-Hispanic prisoners remained relatively low over
the fifteen-year period gang affiliation among prisoners of color increased substantially
between 2002 and 2017 the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners classified as gang-
affiliated rose from 35 to 41 for Hispanic prisoners from 28 to 53 a sharp increase with
substantial consequences for solitary confinement practices
[TABLE 1 NEAR HERE]
Disentangling the Solitary Population Table 2 presents trends in solitary confinement use by
both custody status (classification) and location (facility) We distinguish four groups either
classified at the highest custody level (Maximum labeled ldquoMaxrdquo) or located in the most
restrictive locations (IMUs) At the center of our analysis are prisoners both classified Max and
housed in IMUs (denoted by IMU-Max) Next are prisoners who have not been reclassified
Max but are housed in IMUs for administrative or disciplinary segregation (IMU-AdDSeg)
Third for treatment purposes some Max prisoners are housed at the Special Offender Unit
(SOU) at Monroe designed to address serious behavioral health needs or at the Inmate
Transitional Pod (ITP) at Clallam Bay a program-focused unit for prisoners transitioning out of
solitary confinement (denoted by Max-Tx) Finally a residual group of Max prisoners could not
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Page 15 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
For Peer Review Only
be assigned a facility type because on the snapshot date they were on hospital or court release
or awaiting transfers to an IMU SOU or ITP (Other-Max)6
Solitary confinement use (in IMU-Max IMU-AdDseg and Total IMU) far outpaces
population growth over our study period in the state growing at least 130 (in IMU-Max)
compared to a 13 growth in the state prison population As explained earlier IMU-Max
represents a clearly defined population with reliable snapshot counts for prisoners subjected to
long-term solitary confinement over the entire study period but it excludes prisoners in AdDSeg
either in the IMU or in other within-facility units not identifiable in the between-facility
movement records we analyze Figure 1 illustrates differences in rates and patterns of growth in
IMU-Max and total prison populations accompanied by changes in average length of stay (LOS)
for the IMU-Max group on their snapshot date assignments
[TABLE 2 amp FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE]
One-day counts capture those physically held in IMUs on snapshot dates and demonstrate
that a small but increasing proportion of Washingtonrsquos prison population was held in solitary
confinement across snapshots in both IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg groups One-day counts
however do not account for movement in and out of IMUs at other points To better understand
both the prevalence and duration of placement in solitary we used event-level movement
information to calculate the cumulative amount of time each prisoner spent in solitary
confinement from admission to snapshot date Over the study period a majority of prisoners in
DOC in each snapshot cohort were never placed in solitary confinement but a substantial and
growing proportion of prisoners had spent time in these units The proportion of prisoners
spending at least one day in an IMU between their prison admission and snapshot dates had
increased from 242 in 2002 to 34 in 2017 Prisoners in 2002 spent an average of 6 weeks in
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Justice Quarterly Page 16 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
IMUs from admission to snapshot by 2017 time spent in IMU increased significantly to an
average of 12 weeks (plt001) Changes in mean values are skewed by a few outliers who have
spent their entire (long or life) prison sentences in an IMU beginning decades before and
extending through the study period To counter the skew we binned cumulative days in IMU
into distinct groups 0 days 1-45 days 46-90 days 91 days to 1 year and over 1 year7
Pooling across all cohorts we find that more than half of those who spent at least one day in
an IMU stayed for between 1 and 45 days cumulatively The second largest group (186)
cumulatively spent between three months and one year in solitary confinement and a substantial
proportion (165) of those placed in an IMU spent more than one year there The changing
distribution of cumulative time spent in IMUs reinforces the finding that average time spent in
solitary increased over the study period More prisoners spent at least one day in IMU and
proportions of prisoners in each cumulative length of stay group increased substantially led by
those spending between 46 and 90 days and those spending more than one year in IMU In total
our data demonstrate a greater prevalence of IMU placement across the population over time
and an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs8
In addition to examining cumulative days spent in IMU for the full prison population we
also calculated mean lengths of stay (LOS) in IMUs for both the IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg
groups9 Both groups spent substantial amounts of time in IMU settings although as expected
those in IMU-Max had markedly longer stays in IMU than the IMU-AdDSeg group Across the
study period average time in IMU-Max ranged from 7 to 12 months compared to 2 to 4 months
for the IMU-AdDSeg group The mean LOS for IMU-Max fluctuated generally increasing
until 2011 followed by a decline through 2017 to a level just below the mean LOS in 2002
(Figure 1) For the IMU-AdDSeg group mean LOS dropped even more substantially after
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Page 17 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
2011 Changes in average LOS for both groups were a factor in periods of growth in total IMU
populations prior to 2008 as well as in declines of IMU populations after 2011
The Maximum Custody IMU Population Table 3 compares demographic criminal history gang
status and behavioral histories of IMU-Max and general population (GP) prisoners across
snapshots10 showing significant differences between these groups In both populations White
non-Hispanic prisoners represented the largest group However compared to the GP prisoners
of Hispanic ethnicity were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max while White non-
Hispanic prisoners are under-represented (plt001) Black non-Hispanic people were slightly
under-represented among IMU-Max prisoners relative to their presence in the GP These
disparities diverge over time the proportion of Hispanic prisoners in the IMU-Max population
increased by nearly 34 between 2002 and 2017 while the proportions of all other racial and
ethnic groups decreased
[TABLE 3 ABOUT HERE]
IMU-Max prisoners have more serious conviction and in-prison misconduct histories
than GP prisoners Across cohorts nearly three-quarters (73) of IMU-Max prisoners were
convicted of non-sexual violent offenses compared with just 44 of GP prisoners The IMU-
Max group were also first convicted of prison-eligible offenses at a younger age on average
than those in the GP (plt001) Further in-prison misconduct rates were higher and more serious
for the IMU-Max group annual infraction rates for these prisoners were more than double GP
rates and IMU-Max prisoners committed far more violent infractions and staff assaults than
those in GP (plt001)11 Nevertheless serious misconduct appeared to decline substantially
across IMU-Max prisoner snapshots (but not for GP) with average annual infraction rates among
IMU-Max prisoners falling from 83 in 2002 to 49 in 2017 (plt001) average numbers of violent
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Justice Quarterly Page 18 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
infractions decreasing from 4 to 3 (plt05) and average numbers of staff assaults decreasing from
12 to 06 (plt05)
Gang members were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max compared to GP (66
to 22 pooled across all snapshot years) While the prevalence of gang membership grew in
both groups over time patterns of gang affiliation across racial-ethnic sub-categories behaved
differently within the IMU-Max and GP groups Among GP prisoners the proportion of those
affiliated with Hispanic gangs grew by 118 from 2002 to 2017 among IMU-Max prisoners
Hispanic gang membership grew substantially (55) but at a lower rate than in the GP Black
gang membership on the other hand grew by just 7 in the GP but fell by 24 among IMU-
Max prisoners Explaining these patterns is outside the scope of the present analysis but the
scale of divergence in patterns across both racial-ethnic sub-categories of gang affiliates and GP
and IMU-Max populations merits future attention
Discussion
Our findings draw on an especially robust dataset including (1) multiple individual
characteristics like gang status and infraction rates each one of which has constituted the sole
focus of previous analyses (2) snapshot data that covers both the entire prison population and
each individualrsquos entire criminal and incarceration history and (3) a fifteen-year period of
analysis over six snapshot dates a longer time period than in previous studies of solitary
confinement Such a rich dataset makes a succinct analysis of a subset of findings challenging to
present Here we focus on our analytic methods an overview of the characteristics of people in
and out of solitary confinement and overall patterns in solitary confinement use
First we measure the sites subjects and varieties of solitary confinement in terms of the
intersection of location and custody status This operational taxonomy along with the prisoner
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Page 19 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
characteristics associated with solitary confinement placements was achieved by developing an
extensive population analysis script that compiled a correctional dataset tracking events
movements and dispositions into an analytic dataset permitting analysis of patterns of prisoner
behavior and facility placements over time Our multi-generational researcher-practitioner
collaboration with Washington DOC facilitated both obtaining and interpreting this data In turn
we hope our operational taxonomy will facilitate more precise measurements of solitary
confinement use applicable and comparable across the vicissitudes of different correctional
systemsrsquo varied labels for security levels housing locations and solitary confinement practices
(eg Mears et al 2019)
Second we provide an overview and comparison of characteristics of people in solitary
confinement focusing on the specifically targeted IMU-Max group to provide a clear contrast to
general population prisoners Over time the average IMU-Max prisoner was increasingly likely
to be older Hispanic convicted of a violent offense and gang affiliated but decreasingly likely
to have assaulted a staff member Like Pyrooz amp Mitchell (2019) we find gang members over-
represented in solitary confinement relative to their representation in the general prison
population We also find that Hispanic prisoners are increasingly over-represented in solitary
confinement providing evidence of the racially disproportionate impact of solitary confinement
(eg Sakoda amp Simes 2019 Schlanger 2012 Reiter 2012) Our longitudinal analysis shows this
disproportion steadily increasing over time at a faster rate than gang membership in the general
prison system which increased only slightly over our period of analysis As in other studies
finding misconduct associated with solitary confinement placement (eg Labrecque amp Smith
2019) we find that prisoners in solitary confinement have significantly and consistently higher
annual infraction violent infraction and staff assault rates than general population prisoners
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Justice Quarterly Page 20 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
However all three measures of infractions despite remaining fairly stable throughout the
system generally declined in IMU-Max over time
Rendering population patterns visible also renders visible new questions about what
combination of individual behavior patterns and institutional policies produce the changes we
see Have IMU-Max prisoners become less violent and dangerous Have institutional policies
about identifying gang members and behavioral or affiliation criteria for max custody changed
When the UW solitary confinement study was conducted 20 years ago pioneering experiments
in relaxing the stringency of solitary confinement conditions and supporting prisoners in
changing course had begun at Shelton (Rhodes 2004) at that time Washington DOC leaders
justified IMUs as a necessary response to White Supremacist groups and IMU reforms focused
on mitigating organized attacks and challenges to correctional authority by these groups The late
2010s brought another round of reforms attempting to relax the stringent conditions of solitary
confinement this time factional rivalries among gang-affiliated Hispanic prisoners first justified
IMU placements and then became the focus of reform efforts (Warner et al 2014) This
relationship between shifts in prison population demographics behavior patterns and
correctional attention to specific sub-categories of gangs perceived as particularly dangerous
deserves further analysis but identifying the relevant trends as we do here is a first step
Third we see changing patterns in solitary confinement use over time Overall the
prevalence and duration of solitary confinement grew across Washingtonrsquos prison population
between 2002 and 2017 The raw numbers and rates of both Max custody status prisoners and
prisoners in IMU locations more than doubled from 2002 to 2017 And an increasing proportion
of people throughout the system experienced solitary confinement in 2017 more than 1 in 3
prisoners had spent at least a day in solitary compared to 1 in 4 in 2002 This trend echoes and
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Page 21 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
quantifies Sakoda amp Simesrsquo argument that solitary confinement is a ldquonormal event during
imprisonmentrdquo (2019 2) Although rates of solitary confinement use increased overall average
lengths of stay in solitary confinement (which peaked in 2011 in tandem with the peak years of
solitary confinement use in Washington) decreased By 2017 average lengths of stay on IMU-
Max and IMU-AdDSeg (along with the standard deviations) were the shortest they had been in
the state since 2002 This analysis reveals that Washington DOC had some success in reducing
its use of solitary confinement from peak levels and especially in shortening lengths of stay in
these conditions But what forces facilitated or constrained these reductions
The dramatic shifts we document in both numbers of people in solitary confinement and
durations of stays ndash without any associated dramatic shifts in the usually assumed behavioral
predictors of solitary confinement like overall institutional rates of gang membership or violent
infractions ndash suggest the influence of other institutional factors (cf Lynch 2020) While
additional analysis is needed we can thanks to our iterative conversations with DOC officials
suggest two institutional factors that influenced rates and durations of solitary confinement use
during periods of abrupt change bed capacity increases and local-level rehabilitative
programming changes
First between 2000 and 2008 while DOCrsquos expanding capacity was continually
outpaced by population growth (despite legislative changes intended to reduce imprisonment
WSIPP 2006) IMU capacity in Washington expanded by 520 beds Three years later in 2011
both IMU-Max counts and average LOS peaked Both then decreased in tandem with decreasing
IMU capacity down 212 beds as of 2017 as some units were re-purposed for other special
groups such as parole violators and managed with far less restrictive protocols While the
relationship between capacity IMU counts and length of stay deserves its own focused analysis
17 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 22 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
we have taken the first step by identifying relevant trends These findings suggest that
constraining capacity is likely a key to long-term reductions in solitary confinement along with
reducing lengths of stay and rate of assignments into maximum security settings like IMUs
Second between 2011 and 2014 Washington DOC built upon previous local initiatives
at Clallam Bay and Walla Walla IMUs embarking on an effort to ldquoreinvent what segregation can
berdquo partnering with Vera Institute of Justice eliminating some aversive disciplinary policies
and introducing facility-specific missions and group rehabilitative programming across IMUs
(Neyfakh 2015) Both the temporary drop in IMU-Max populations in 2014 and the more
sustained decreases in average lengths of stay for this population between 2011 and 2017 are tied
to these interventions
The correctional population analysis presented in this study exemplifies an approach to
research and collaboration suited to improving the ability of corrections systems to track changes
in prisoner characteristics lengths of stay and overall rates of placement in various forms of
solitary confinement Rendering such patterns visible strengthens researcher-practitioner
collaboration revealing in Washingtonrsquos case what is working ie sustained reductions in
lengths of solitary confinement stays and what is not working ie less sustained reductions in
rates of solitary confinement use By displaying institutional patterns our collaborative research
findings also suggest avenues of analysis to improve outcomes for prisoners and in prison
settings
MAIN TEXT WORD COUNT 6082
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 18
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 23 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
References
Allen DG Lovell DG amp Rhodes LA Correctional mental health a research agenda In JJ
Fitzpatrick PA White eds Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Research Digest New York
Springer pp 180-184
Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
Yale Law School (ASCA-Liman) (2015) Time-In-Cell The ASCA-Liman 2014 National
Survey of Administrative Segregation in Prison (Aug) Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca-
liman_administrativesegregationreportpdf
__ (2018) Reforming restrictive housing The 2018 ASCA-Liman nationwide survey of time-in-
cell Report issued by the Association of State Correctional Administrators (ASCA) amp the
Liman Center for Public Interest Law at Yale Law School Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca_liman_2018_restrictiv
e_housing_released_oct_2018pdf
Beck A J (2015) Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 201112 Washington DC
Bureau of Justice Statistics Government Printing Office Retrieved from
httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112pdf
Berger D (2014) Captive Nation Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina Press
Bloom J and WE Martin (2013) Black Against Empire The History and Politics of the Black
Panther Party Berkeley University of California Press
Briggs CS JL Sundt and TC Castellano (2003) ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security
prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 1341-1376
19 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 24 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Cochran JC E L Toman D P Mears amp W D Bales (2018) Solitary Confinement as
Punishment Examining In-Prison Sanctioning Disparities Justice Quarterly 35(3) 381-411
Cohen Fred 2008 Penal isolation beyond the seriously mentally ill Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 1017-1047
Foucault M (1977) Discipline and Punish The Birth of the Prison New York Pantheon Books
Haney Craig ldquoThe Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement A Systematic Critiquerdquo
Crime and Justice 47 no 1 (2018) pp 365-416
Haney C amp Lynch M 1997 Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of
supermax and solitary confinement NYU Review of Law amp Social Change 23 477ndash570
Hoffman E amp McCoy J 2018 Concrete Mama Prison Profiles from Walla Walla Seattle WA
University of Washington Press
Kaeble D Cowhig M (2018) Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121
US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018
Kurki L amp N Morris (2001) The Purposes Practices and Problems of Supermax Prisons Crime
and Justice 28 358-424
Labrecque R M amp Smith P (2019) Assessing the impact of time spent in restrictive housing
confinement on subsequent measures of institutional adjustment among men in prison Criminal
Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1445-1455
Liebling A (1999) ldquoDoing Research in Prison Breaking the Silencerdquo Theoretical Criminology
Vol 3147ndash73
Logan MW B Dulisse S Peterson MA Morgan TM Olma P Pareacute (2017) Correctional
shorthands Focal concerns and the decision to administer solitary confinement Journal of
Criminal Justice 52 90-100
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 20
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For Peer Review Only
Page 25 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Lucas J W amp Jones M A (2019) An analysis of the deterrent effects of disciplinary segregation
on institutional rule violation rates Criminal Justice Policy Review 30(5) 765-787
Lovell DG 2008 Patterns of disturbance in a supermax population Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 985-1004
Lovell DG (2014) Isolation Vignettes Practical applications of strict scrutiny The Correctional
Law Reporter 26(1) 3
Lovell DG Cloyes KC Allen DG amp Rhodes LA 2000 Who lives in super-maximum
custody A Washington State study Federal Probation 64(2) 33-38
Lovell DG C Johnson KC Cain 2007 Recidivism of Supermax Prisoners in Washington
State Crime and Delinquency 53(4) 633-56
Lynch M (2019) Focally Concerned About Focal Concerns A Conceptual and Methodological
Critique of Sentencing Disparities Research Justice Quarterly 36(7) 1148-1175
Mears D P Hughes V Pesta G B Bales W D Brown J M Cochran J C amp Wooldredge
J (2019) The new solitary confinement A conceptual framework for guiding and assessing
research and policy on ldquoRestrictive housingrdquo Criminal Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1427-
1444
Mears DP amp WD Bales (2009) Supermax Incarceration and Recidivism Criminology 47(4)
1131-66
National Institute of Justice (NIJ) (2016) Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and
Future Directions Washington DC National Institute of Justice
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nij250315pdf
21 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 26 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Neyfakh L 2015 What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate 432015
httpsslatecomnews-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-
surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml
OrsquoKeefe Maureen L Kelli J Klebe Alysha Stucker Kristin Sturm amp William Leggett (2011) One
Year Longitudinal Study of the Psychological Effects of Administrative Segregation Document
No 232973 Washington DC National Criminal Justice Research Service National Institute
of Justice wwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants 232973pdf
Petersilia J (1991) Policy Relevance and the Future of Criminology Criminology 29(1) 1-15
__ (2009) When Prisoners Come Home Parole and Prisoner Re-entry New York Oxford
University Press
Pyrooz D C amp M M Mitchell (2019) The Use of Restrictive Housing on Gang and Non- Gang
Affiliated Inmates in US Prisons Findings from a National Survey of Correctional Agencies
Justice Quarterly 37(4) 590-615
Pyrooz DC RM Labrecque JJ Tostlebe amp B Useem (2020) Views on COVID-19 from Inside
Prison Perspectives of High-security Prisoners Justice Evaluation Journal doi
1010802475197920201777578
Reiter K (2012) Parole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007
Punishment amp Society 14(5) 530-63
__ (2016) 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven
Yale University Press)
__ (2018) ldquoAfter Solitary Confinementrdquo Studies in Law Politics and Society Vol 77 1-29
Reiter K J Ventura D Lovell D Augustine M Barragan T Blair K Chesnut P Dashtgard
G Gonzalez N Pifer J Strong (2020) ldquoPsychological Distress in Solitary Confinement
Symptoms Severity and Prevalence United States 2017-18rdquo American Journal of Public
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 22
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 27 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Health Vol 110 S52-S56
Rhodes LA (2004) Total Confinement Madness and Reason in Maximum Security Berkeley
CA University of California Press
Riveland C (1999) Supermax prisons Overview and general considerations Washington DC
National Institute of Corrections httpstaticnicicgovLibrary014937pdf
Rubin A T amp Reiter K (2018) Continuity in the Face of Penal Innovation Revisiting the
History of American Solitary Confinement Law amp Social Inquiry Vol 434 1604-1632
Sakoda RT amp Simes JT (2019) Solitary Confinement and the US Prison Boom Criminal
Justice Policy Review doi 1011770887403419895315
Schlanger M (2012) Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial
disparities Michigan Journal of Race amp Law 18 241
Smith Peter S 2006 The Effects of Solitary Confinement on Prison Inmates A Brief History and
Review of the Literature In Michael Tonry (ed) Crime and Justice 34 441-528
State of Washington SHB1765 1993
Tasca Melinda amp J Turanovic (2018) Examining Race and Gender Disparities in Restrictive
Housing Placements National Institute of Justice WEB Du Bois Program of Research on
Race and Crime Project SummaryDoc No 252062
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants252062pdf
Toch Hans (1977) Living in Prison The Ecology of Survival New York Free Press
Toch H amp Adams K w Grant D (1989) Coping Maladaptation in prisons Washington DC
Transaction Publishers revised as Acting Out American Psychological Association 2002
23 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 28 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Warner B D Pacholke amp C Kujath (2014) Operation Place Safety First Year in Review
(Washington State Department of Corrections)
httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
WSIPP (Washington State Institute for Public Policy) (2006) Evidence-Based Public Policy
Options to Reduce Future Prison Construction Criminal Justice Costs and Crime Rates
httpswwwwsippwagovReportFile952Wsipp_Evidence-Based-Public-Policy-Options-to-
Reduce-Future-Prison-Construction-Criminal-Justice-Costs-and-Crime-Rates_Full-
Reportpdf
Acknowledgements The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Eldon Vail Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Formerly of the University of Washington Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor and L Clark Johnson provided critical advice at early stages of data compilation At the University of California Irvine Keely Blissmer helped to compile the literature review Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Pasha Dashtgard Gabriela Gonzalez and Justin Strong all participated in data collection and analysis at various stages of this project Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
Funding Details This work was supported by the Langeloth Foundation and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
Disclosure Statement None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
1 In a timely example of how relevant the analysis in the instant study is DOC research staff recently noted that they ldquohad some concernsrdquo with these numbers as originally reported and have revised them upwards re-calculating that in 2015 34 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo according to the ASCA-Liman Definition and in 2017 41 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo by this definition E-mail communication with DOC Department of Research dated Sept 25 and Sept 28 2020 on file with authors The ASCA-Liman report defines ldquorestrictive housingrdquo as ldquoseparating prisoners from the general population and holding them in cells for an average of 22 or more hours per day for 15 continuous days or morerdquo 2 Intra-facility housing changes and periods spent in recently decommissioned internal solitary confinement units are better captured in our related intensive field study dataset of 106 solitary confinement prisoners (Reiter et al 2020) 3 General crime types were derived from DOC codes in the administrative data Violent non-sex offenses include murder manslaughter robbery and assault sex offenses include rape sexual assault child molestation and failure to register as a sex offender property crimes include arson burglary theft forgery trafficking and possession of
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 24
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 29 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
stolen property drug crimes include manufacturing delivering or possession with intent to distribute and possession of a controlled substance 4 To avoid confusion we follow DOCs terminology with the term Hispanic which DOC codes separately from race as lsquoHispanic Originrsquo (YN) but we apply these data to define mutually exclusive categories ldquoWhite non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as White and who is not classified as Hispanic Origin ldquoBlack non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as Black and not identified as Hispanic ldquoHispanicrdquo includes any individual whose ethnicity is listed as Hispanic or Latino regardless of any other racial identification ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as AsianPacific Islander Native AmericanAmerican Indian Other Unknown and whose ethnicity is not Hispanic 5 Rates of gang affiliation by racialethnic group were generated by dividing the total number of members in each racialethnic group identified as an STG member by the total number of prisoners of each racialethnic group Table 1 displays the STG membership by racialethnic affiliation of STGs grouped from detailed STG data provided by DOC STGs identified as ldquoWhiterdquo affiliated included Biker Skinhead White Supremacist and Security Threat Concern ldquoBlackrdquo affiliated included Black Gangster Disciples Blood Crip and Vice Lord ldquoHispanicrdquo affiliated included Nortentildeo Surentildeo Paisas La Fuma Cuban and Hispanic-Other ldquoOtherrdquo affiliated included Asian and Other 6 Our original analysis identified an even larger proportion of prisoners in this ldquoOther-Maxrdquo group our practitioner collaborators thought more than 10 was an unlikely proportion of prisoners to be assigned max custody status but still awaiting placement in an IMU or similar facility and encouraged us to evaluate whether some of those ldquoOther-Maxrdquo prisoners were housed out-of-state Indeed when we examined individual cases in the original movement files we found this was true leading us to better specify and exclude those prisoners in our sample of any custody status who were housed out of state 7 Here the 45-day cut point reflects institutionally-mandated administrative hearings required to extend or release an individual from administrative segregation Likewise for those classified as Max (re-)classification reviews only happen every 6-12 months as reflected in the overall longer mean lengths of stay for IMU-Max as opposed to IMU-AdDSeg groups Both represent examples of policies driving patterns in lengths of stay 8 This analysis uses the person (in custody as of the snapshot date) as the unit of analysis Even if a single person has multiple stays in an IMU during the current admission up to the snapshot date they would be counted only once as ldquohaving spent at least one day in an IMUrdquo We further examined the average percentage of days spent in an IMU out of the total number of days in prison up to the snapshot date for each cohort finding an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs across the cohorts While not presented here in detail this finding reinforces the trends in the cumulative time spent in IMU and average LOS analyses 9 Unlike the cumulative days in IMU calculations the average length of stay by classification and confinement levels presented here do not cumulate days in IMU facilities Here each placement in a distinct IMU facility is analyzed as a separate placement term Thus if one prisoner is placed in IMU facility A and subsequently moved to IMU facility B the length of stay in each placement will be counted separately (To the extent individuals have consecutive stays across multiple IMUs then these numbers might undercount average lengths of total stay) Length of stay is calculated from admission date in the current incarceration up until the snapshot date 10 The general population (GP) excludes prisoners housed in IMUs prisoners with a max custody classification held in other locations (ie those in SOU ITP or ldquoOther Locationsrdquo) prisoners held out of state and prisoners whose locations or custody statuses were unknown 11 Violent infractions include seven infraction types aggravated assault on another offender fighting possession of a weapon aggravated assault on a staff member sexual assault of a staff member assault on another offender sexual assault of another offender and assault on a staff member
25 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE
See next page
91
ID
ID
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
PLOS ONE
OPEN ACCESS
Citation Strong JD Reiter K Gonzalez G Tublitz R Augustine D Barragan M et al (2020) The body in isolation The physical health impacts of incarceration in solitary confinement PLoS ONE 15 (10) e0238510 httpsdoiorg101371journal pone0238510
Editor Andrea Knittel University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill UNITED STATES
Received February 19 2020
Accepted August 18 2020
Published October 9 2020
Peer Review History PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process therefore we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final published articles The editorial history of this article is available here httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510
Copyright copy 2020 Strong et al This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original author and source are credited
Data Availability Statement Data cannot be shared publicly because the administrative data we analyze in this paper is drawn from a confidential data file shared with the research team for the
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The body in isolation The physical health
impacts of incarceration in solitary
confinement
Justin D Strong 1 Keramet Reiter1 Gabriela Gonzalez1Dagger Rebecca Tublitz1Dagger
Dallas Augustine1Dagger Melissa Barragan1Dagger Kelsie Chesnut 1Dagger Pasha Dashtgard2Dagger
Natalie Pifer3Dagger Thomas R Blair4Dagger
1 Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Irvine California United
States of America 2 Department of Psychological Sciences University of California Irvine Irvine California
United States of America 3 Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice The University of Rhode Island
Kingston Rhode Island United States of America 4 Department of Psychiatry Southern California
Permanente Medical Group Downey Los Angeles California United States of America
These authors contributed equally to this work
Dagger These authors also contributed equally to this work GG and RT are joint assistant authors on this work
jdstronguciedu
Abstract
We examine how solitary confinement correlates with self-reported adverse physical health
outcomes and how such outcomes extend the understanding of the health disparities associ-
ated with incarceration Using a mixed methods approach we find that solitary confinement is
associated not just with mental but also with physical health problems Given the dispropor-
tionate use of solitary among incarcerated people of color these symptoms are most likely to
affect those populations Drawing from a random sample of prisoners (n = 106) in long-term
solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections in 2017 we con-
ducted semi-structured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assess-
ments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for these subjects We also
conducted a paper survey of the entire long-term solitary confinement population (n = 225
respondents) and analyzed administrative data for the entire population of prisoners in the
state in 2017 (n = 17943) Results reflect qualitative content and descriptive statistical analy-
sis BPRS scores reflect clinically significant somatic concerns in 15 of sample Objective
specification of medical conditions is generally elusive but that itself is a highly informative
finding Using subjective reports we specify and analyze a range of physical symptoms expe-
rienced in solitary confinement (1) skin irritations and weight fluctuation associated with the
restrictive conditions of solitary confinement (2) un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
associated with the restrictive policies of solitary confinement (3) musculoskeletal pain exac-
erbated by both restrictive conditions and policies Administrative data analyses reveal dispro-
portionate rates of racialethnic minorities in solitary confinement This analysis raises the
stakes for future studies to evaluate comparative prevalence of objective medical diagnoses
and potential causal mechanisms for the physical symptoms specified here and for under-
standing differential use of solitary confinement and its medically harmful sequelae
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 1 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
limited purpose of evaluating patterns of solitary confinement use in the Washington department of corrections If any researchers wish to obtain a similar data file from the Washington department of corrections the authors of this paper would be happy to consult with those researchers about the request and the process for obtaining the data In theory the administrative data file used in this study could be accessed again by future researchers Researchers would need to contact the Washington department of corrections Here is the process and relevant contacts httpswww DocWaGovinformationdataresearch Htmrequests We confirm the authors have no special access privileges others would not have to the data underlying our study beyond patient negotiations with the Washington department of corrections about exactly what data would be shared for what purposes
Funding KR received a Langeloth Grant from the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation https wwwlangelothorg The funders had no role in study design data collection and analysis decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist
Introduction
The health implications of solitary confinement have received increasing attention in recent
years [1 2] Although both the conditions and terms defining solitary confinement are con-
tested the practice generally involves being locked in a cell alone for 22 or more hours per
day with extremely limited access to human contact and communication [3 4] Until recently
however research on the health consequences of solitary confinement has focused almost
entirely on the negative impacts on mental health [4ndash8] While initial studies focused on the
effects of sensory deprivation [9ndash11] recent work has examined the impacts of social depriva-
tions [12 13] Such studies have found that placement in solitary confinement has been associ-
ated with symptoms of increased psychological distress such as anxiety depression paranoia
and aggression [14ndash16] A 2018 study for instance found that prisoners who had spent time
in solitary confinement were three times as likely to exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) than those who had not [17] Some researchers however have argued that
the psychological harms of solitary confinement are limited or unverified [18 19] The analy-
ses on which such opinions rely have in turn been criticized for neglecting existing literature
and for other serious methodological concerns including an inability to isolate exposure to
solitary confinement lack of specificity about variability and comparability in actual condi-
tions of confinement and the inapplicability of psychological assessment scales in the prison
context [1 20]
In a study examining the lived experiences of solitary confinement in Washington state we
too focused on documenting the mental health impacts of the practice through qualitative
interviews with a random sample of 106 prisoners in long-term solitary confinement applica-
tion of a Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment at two points in time with those pris-
oners review of medical health records and analysis of administrative data To our surprise
however we found that after anxiety and depression the third most common significant
health symptoms experienced by our subjects were ldquosomatic concernsrdquo defined by the BPRS
as ldquoconcerns over present bodily healthrdquo [21] This observation led us to examine our data sys-
tematically for evidence of the impacts of solitary confinement on physical health and to con-
sider the implications of such impacts for understanding the health disparities enacted by
solitary confinement and by incarceration more broadly
Existing research on the physical health impacts of incarceration demonstrates the need for
further study of both the medical effects of isolation and its racially disparate impacts espe-
cially considering that there are roughly 80000 people in isolation units nationwide and this
population includes a disproportionate number of racial minorities relative to the overall
prison population [22] Outside of prison health disparities by race and ethnicity are well
attested by existing epidemiologic research [23] Notably Black and other racialethnic minor-
ities consistently show lower life expectancies and worse mental health outcomes than whites
[24ndash27] Health disparities persist and are magnified among the incarcerated population
where people of color are disproportionately represented [28ndash30] In particular people in
prison are at higher risk than the general population for substance use disorders psychiatric
disorders victimization and chronic infectious diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C [31ndash34]
Incarceration has also been shown to exacerbate chronic illnesses such as obesity [35] hyper-
tension and asthma [36 37 29] and formerly incarcerated people experience disparately
adverse health outcomes more generally [38] The interaction between the disparate impacts
of race and incarceration on health mean that mass incarceration itself has been identified as a
social determinant of health for Black men in the United States [39 40]
Solitary confinement amplifies the disproportionately adverse effects of mass incarceration
on people of color Depending on the composition of the prison system Blacks andor Latinos
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 2 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
are often over-represented in solitary confinement relative to their (over)representation in the
general prison population [40ndash44] Any concentrated health disadvantages affecting people in
prison and especially people of color is potentially even more concentrated among those liv-
ing in solitary confinement Moreover existing evidence suggests that conditions of solitary
confinement exacerbate health problems and pose a significant public health risk [45 42]
Studies reporting the physical health impacts of solitary confinement have tended to focus
on issues like self-harm and suicide [46 47 8] One recent study has examined the cardiovas-
cular health burdens of solitary confinement [45] A growing body of neuroscience literature
has examined the effects of solitary confinement on the brains of lab animals documenting
that lab animals in isolated environments have ldquoa decrease in the anatomical complexity of the
brainrdquo compared to those in more enriched environments [48 49] (p70) One recent study
found similar effects in Antarctic expeditioners a shrinking hippocampus hypothesized to be
a result of the isolated and monotonous environment [50] Such neuroscience research has
been used in litigation to argue that there is likely a similar effect on humans imprisoned in
solitary confinement [51 48 49] The associations between solitary confinement self-harm
and lab animalsrsquo brain structure suggest comorbidity between mental health and physical
injury in solitary confinement [1 48]
The physical effects of solitary confinement manifest well beyond release from isolation
and from incarceration overall One recent study has examined post-release mortality (from
all causes including suicide murder and drug overdose) associated with previous time in soli-
tary confinement people who had spent time in solitary confinement in North Carolina
between 2000 and 2015 were 24 more likely to die in their first year after release than former
prisoners who had not spent time in solitary confinement [52] Similarly a 2020 study found
that Danish people who had spent time in solitary confinement had higher mortality within
five years of being released from prison compared to those who never spent time in solitary
confinement [53] This mortality risk associated with solitary confinement exceeds the already
high mortality risk associated with incarceration and release from prison [52ndash54]
In sum while many studies have examined the relationship between incarceration and
health and some studies have examined the relationship between solitary confinement and
mental health the existing literature lacks analysis of disparate physical health outcomes across
levels and severity of confinement [2] especially within isolation and for incarcerated people
of color To our knowledge this article is the first of its kind to consider associations between
solitary confinement and a range of physical health problems and to incorporate explicit con-
sideration of racial health disparities
Methods and materials
To explore the physical health problems experienced in isolation we draw upon a research
study of people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of
Corrections (WADOC) The study consists of four dimensions of participant data 1 surveys
of prisoners in solitary confinement 2 in-depth interviews with a random sample of prisoners
in solitary confinement 3 reviews of the medical (covering mental and physical health) files
as well as the disciplinary records for this subset of prisoners and 4 administrative data for
the entire 2017 prison population provided by the WADOC Data was collected in 2017 and
2018
Setting
WADOC is a mid-sized state prison system with the 12th lowest rate of incarceration of the 50
United States [20] The state and its prison system have a reputation for being progressive
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 3 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
including engaging in reforms to minimize the use of solitary confinement statewide and for
inviting independent academic researchers to evaluate conditions and programs [20 55ndash57]
Five of the statersquos 12 prison facilities have an Intensive Management Unit (IMU) an all-male
unit or building housing people in solitary confinement (with highly restricted access to com-
missary phones radios televisions visitors and roughly 10 hours per week out-of-cell) for
durations ranging from months to years Our study focused on people within the IMUs on
ldquomaximum custody statusrdquo the highest security level assigned to state prisoners housed in the
IMU for an indeterminate period usually following one or more rule violations with return to
the general prison population contingent on meeting specific benchmarks
Participant sampling
First paper surveys were distributed in-person (and collected on the same day) to all 363 peo-
ple on maximum custody status in the five state IMUs in the spring of 2017 Next during the
summer of 2017 roughly one-third (29) of all 363 people on maximum custody status in
IMUs were interviewed selected from randomly ordered lists of the population of each IMU
One year later (2018) all participants from our initial random sample who were still incarcer-
ated one year later including those no longer housed in the IMU were re-interviewed We
also reviewed paper medical and disciplinary files for each consenting year-one interview par-
ticipant Interviews file reviews and observations were conducted over two separate three-
week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team members
Finally we received administrative data on all people within the state prison system as of July
1 2017
Research team training
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and develop the interview instru-
ment Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol for
administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment train-
ing sessions with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Venturamdashin year one and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Dr Ventura conducted an interra-
ter reliability analysis confirming trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or
greater for the BPRS This extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members (9
women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral students (9) with
expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement settings identified
and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being studied and mini-
mized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application of questions
and assessments Eight of the authors on this paper participated in interviews two participated
only in data analysis
Interviews
On site in the Washington State IMUs after the random sample was drawn and willing partici-
pants identified prison staff escorted participants one at a time to a confidential area (moni-
tored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff) Prior to conducting interviews interviewers
informed participants that participation was voluntary and would not involve incentives
administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all informa-
tion shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent security-
related threatrdquo (In the highly restrictive setting of the IMU any incentive beyond providing
human contact and an attentive listener would both run the risk of being an undue influence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 4 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
coercing participation and be administratively prohibited) Participants provided oral consent
to participate in the interview Immediately following interviews interviewers asked partici-
pants whether they consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to partici-
pating in one-year follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all
but two (n = 104) consented in writing to medical file reviews Following interviews interview-
ers reviewed consenting participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of diagnoses prescrip-
tions and substance abuse status WADOC additionally provided electronic administrative
health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as comparable popula-
tion-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
All identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings tran-
scripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible
only through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in
data cleaning and linking The University of California Irvine Office of Research Institutional
Review Board approved this study (HS 2016ndash2816) and the WADOC Research Department
reviewed this approval
Data collection instruments
The initial paper survey of people confined in the WADOC IMU consisted of 36 numbered
questions (each containing a combination of yesno ordinal bubble options and short answer
sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to explain or elaborate on their answers)
about experiences in IMUs conditions of confinement health and well-being and demo-
graphic background drawing from existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [58ndash
62] Survey in S1 Text In all there were 89 substantive items on the survey (excluding demo-
graphic questions) coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU) ordinal (eg
daily weekly monthly describing frequency of interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) vari-
ables In this paper we report on the results of a sub-set of five quantitatively coded items relat-
ing to health from this larger survey This survey functioned as a pilot instrument for the in-
person interviews allowing us to ensure questions were clear and relevant yielding responses
comparable across subjects and institutional contexts and providing our interviewers with a
baseline description of participantsrsquo experiences prior to conducting qualitative interviews
The qualitative interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured questions
(each containing a combination of yesno questions and probing open-ended follow-up ques-
tions) seeking elaboration on responses from the survey questions and also drawing from
existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [60ndash63] including conditions of daily life
(prior to and during isolation) perceived state of physical and mental health access to medical
treatment and experiences with required programming in the IMU among other topics
Interview instrument in S2 Text We first used the instrument at the smallest IMU in Wash-
ington interviewing 15 prisoners and we then revised both the wording and ordering of ques-
tions for maximum clarity and engagement in the remaining 91 interviews we conducted
across the four other IMUs in the state In total 40 of the substantive items on the interview
instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 18 embedded questions designed to
establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg
How much does it cost to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have you noticed any
changes in your health since you have been in this IMU) variables Such questions always
included open-ended follow-up questions (eg Can you describe those changes) Transcribed
responses to those open-ended follow-up questions which related in any way to physical
health constitute the central source of data analyzed in this paper
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 5 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Interviews ranged in length from 45 minutes to three hours Follow-up interviews lasted
between 45 minutes and two hours The condensed year-two instrument contained approxi-
mately 70 questions largely replicating the year-one questions but excluding the background
demographic questions and questions about experiences over time in prison and adjusting
some questions to address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status
As part of both initial and follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psy-
chological assessment both during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following
(for the 10 observational items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech)
the interviews For self-report questions (14 items) embedded in the interview guide inter-
viewers asked about the presence of symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard [20]
Interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier audio recorded (with permis-
sion) professionally transcribed in Microsoft Word translated (in one case from Spanish into
English) by research team members systematically stripped of identifying information and
then systematically checked against the original audio by the original interviewer(s) Interviews
were linked by random identifier to BPRS score sheets (which were scanned and entered into
Microsoft Excel for descriptive statistical analysis) scanned medical file review notes and
WADOC administrative data
Data analysis amp reporting
BPRS and other administrative data were imported into Statistical Package for Social Science
(SPSS) (IBM Armonk NY) and Stata (StataCorp LLC College Station TX) to generate
descriptive statistics including the comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS
items and factors relating to physical health and demographics of the sample interview popula-
tion as compared to the IMU population the overall state prison population and the overall
population of the state itself Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos test were performed to evaluate
the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing location time and raceethnicity chi
square tests of homogeneity were performed to compare racialethnic distributions in the
IMU population the general prison population and the Washington state population The
demographic data utilizes a confidential data file from the WADOC
Transcribed interviews were analyzed using Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software Develop-
ment GmbH Berlin Germany) Six team members who had also conducted interviews
engaged in an iterative and recursive coding process Consistent with the tenets of constructivist
grounded theory coders inductively explored how participants make meaning of their experi-
ences (here their time in solitary confinement) [63 64] This process included initial line-by-
line open-coding of a subset of transcripts which generated a list of 214 codes grouped into 11
major categories (eg Health) with sub-themes (eg physical health) [63] Some of these initial
codes and categories corresponded with specific questions on our interview instrument (most
relevant for the instant analysis question 29 concerned medical ldquokitesrdquo and questions 30 31
and 38 concerned physical health and somatic concerns) However open-ended questions also
yielded responses related to these topics and were so coded Given the constraints of the prison
setting (in-person contact is expensive and time-consuming mail contact is not confidential
because of prison censoring policies) participants have not provided systematic feedback on
their transcripts or our findings However the year-two interviews did give research team mem-
bers an opportunity to discuss year-one themes with participants
All quotations presented in this paper were initially identified in the first phase of our cod-
ing process by one of three (out of our initial 214) codes ldquosomatic concernsrdquo ldquophysical healthrdquo
or ldquokitesrdquo (the standard slang term for a paper form handed to a correctional officer to request
medical attention) Two coders then used intermediate focused coding techniques to
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 6 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
re-code these 319 quotes exploring the relationship between solitary confinement condi-
tions and policies and physical health problems ldquotransform[ing] basic data into more abstract
concepts and allowing the theory to emerge from the datardquo [64 p 5]
Notes from reviewing participantsrsquo paper medical files corroborate details from the qualita-
tive analysis that systematically anchors this data Each participant has been assigned a pseudo-
nym and because we are also exploring the racially disparate impact of the health problems we
identify we specify each quoted participantrsquos self-identified race or ethnicity We linked quota-
tions to specific racialethnic identities only after quotations were selected for inclusion in this
manuscript as representative of the themes we identified in coding
Results
In total 225 prisoners in IMU (62) responded to our in-person survey The refusal rate of
initial interviews was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of prison-
ers [15 58 59 65] The drop-out rate of our sample for the one-year follow-up interviews was
comparable to other studies at 25 there were 4 refusals 21 institutional out-of-state and
parole transfers precluding follow-up and one death [58ndash61] Our random sample of 106 (all-
male) IMU prisoners reflects a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU mean of 5
prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Among our participants 42 were white 12
were African American 23 were Latino 23 were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differ-
ences between our participants and all people held in IMU at the time of our sample People in
the general prison population at the time of our sample are notably different as they are older
less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang-affili-
ated and less likely to be Latino than those held in IMU [20] (We discuss racial differences
across these populations further in the final results sub-section)
Prevalence of somatic concerns
As an initial basis for describing physical symptoms experienced in solitary confinement we
present a quantitative analysis of the prevalence of somatic concerns in our random sample of
106 people held in IMU and the variability of these concerns across time and housing location
In 2017 15 of participants reported having clinically significant (formally defined as a sever-
ity of 4 or higher out of a possible 7) somatic concerns (formally defined as ldquoconcern over pres-
ent bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment [21] In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80
respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 reported clinically signifi-
cant ratings of somatic concern
While ratings of clinically significant somatic concern mostly varied within participants
over time our analysis indicated some persistence of somatic issues across the two assessment
periods Of those who reported clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were
re-interviewed in 2018 (12 respondents 4 were unavailable for re-interview) 25 (3 respon-
dents) indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic issues in 2018 An exact McNe-
marrsquos test revealed no statistically significant relationship between the proportion of
respondents reporting clinically significant somatic concerns in 2017 and 2018 (p = 0 0) In the initial 2017 assessment all study subjects were housed in IMU At the time of re-
interview in 2018 52 respondents had moved into the general prison population while 28
remained in IMU Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 (6 of 28) reported clinically sig-
nificant somatic concerns compared to just 8 of those housed in the general prison popula-
tion (4 of 52) While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
concern in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 confidence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 7 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test) No significant differences were observed in the distribution
of clinically significant somatic concern ratings across racial and ethnic groups
Complementing the BPRS assessment data from the random sample of 106 individuals in
IMU custody survey data collected from the full IMU population in 2017 further indicated the
prevalence of somatic concerns among this population Of the 225 survey respondents 63
expressed health concerns 48 were taking medication 17 had arthritis and 8 had experi-
enced a fall in solitary confinement Importantly for the analysis of emerging symptoms in par-
ticular 82 replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo
while in the IMU These survey results like the BPRS somatic concern results benefit from tri-
angulation with our qualitative data
Specifying physical symptoms
We identify three categories of physical symptoms people experience in solitary confinement
each associated with different aspects of IMU housing symptoms associated with deprivation
conditions symptoms associated with deprivation policies limiting access to healthcare and
chronic musculoskeletal pain exacerbated by the intersection of deprivation conditions and
deprivation policies In each category we analyze how the institution of solitary confinement
shapes both physical health outcomes and perceptions of health for people housed in solitary
confinement revealing both the mechanisms of physical health deterioration and the accentu-
ated comorbidity of physical and mental health in solitary confinement
Deprivation conditions Our participants described a range of physical ailments directly
connected to the conditions of their confinement especially the various deprivations of movement
provisions (from food to toiletries) and human contact inherent in the institutional restrictions
defining solitary confinement Skin irritations and weight fluctuations were the most common of
these participants experienced both as co-morbid with anxiety and other health issues
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They
understood these conditions as being directly associated the poor air and water quality irritat-
ing hygiene products and lack of sun exposure inherent to their conditions of solitary confine-
ment People in the IMU (unlike those in the general prison population) usually cannot
purchase or trade for alternative higher-quality hygiene products their cells have limited nat-
ural light (at best a window far above eye-level at worst no window) and even the exercise
areas frequently have limited natural light Indeed research has documented how isolation can
cause vitamin D deficiency due to lack of natural light exposure [66]
As Joseph (white) explained an ostensibly trivial physical problem like dandruff can
inspire a sense of helplessness in the IMU
Well I try not to [think about] what happens to my body Because yoursquore going to obsess
on it probably Minor things become huge when yoursquore in segregation and so something
that youndashyou as being free in society can alleviate by going to you know to [the store] or
whatever and just get a dandruff shampoo You canrsquot do that here And kiting medical and
telling them ldquoHey I have a severe problem with dermatitis and my headrsquos itching and Irsquove
got bleeding scabs on my headrdquo or whatever the case may be therersquos nothing that we can
do here Yoursquore SOL [shit out of luck]
Josephrsquos inability to treat his skin irritations himself led to both helplessness and obsessive-
ness further exacerbating the discomfort and potential health consequences of the issue This
case illustrates how a free personrsquos flaky skin or minor embarrassment becomes a potentially
severe medical problem in solitary confinement entailing bleeding scabs on the scalp
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 8 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Participants frequently experienced fluctuations in body weight and as with skin irritations
connected these symptoms to conditions inherent to solitary confinement What started as
simple observations about diet exercise and appearance often turned into analyses of the
impact of conditions of confinement on physical as well as mental health Simon (Black) dis-
cussed being ldquoreal worriedrdquo about his weight
The only reason I know theyrsquore not really giving us the calorie needs theyrsquore supposed to
give us is because I feel like Irsquom losing more muscle than I am fat And to lose more muscle
than fat is because yoursquore not getting the nutrients that you need
Not only is weight loss a significant source of anxiety for Simon but he connects the depri-
vations of confinementndashthe lack of nutritious food and sufficient caloriesndashto physical changes
in his body Whether his explanation is correct or simple lack of physical activity is more likely
to explain the changes accurately IMU confinement ostensibly produced the change
Participants also described restricting their own dietary intake beyond the already limited
rations (usually calculated to meet the minimum daily calorie intake standards) for a variety
of reasons from the quality of the food to their emotional state Michael (Latino) described
being suspicious of staff having tampered with his food ldquoI got my breakfast bowl and there
was a tear on the plastic [ ] Sometimes your mind plays tricks on you like theyrsquore trying to
poison you or somethingrdquo While Michael noted that his suspicions were likely just in his
mind Philip (Black) asserted ldquoThey was poisoning my foodndashthey control everything They
can even manipulate the water Irsquom so fucking serious this place is highly technologically
advancedrdquo For those like Michael and Philip psychological states associated with the condi-
tions of confinement (eg suspiciousness paranoia and potentially psychosis) caused them to
restrict their food intake resulting in weight loss Indeed both Michael and Philip had docu-
mented diagnoses of mental illness in their medical files bipolar disorder and undifferentiated
schizophrenia respectively Food restrictions can of course lead to more imminently danger-
ous conditions such as dehydration electrolyte imbalances or renal failurendashnone of which are
likely to be subject to objective evaluation in the IMU as we discuss further in the next sub-
section on the impacts of deprivation policies
Some prisoners made a more direct connection between their mental health their dietary
intake and their physical health For instance Kai (Native American) said
I donrsquot work out because I have a problem breathing This is the first time Irsquove ever done
a program [IMU term] where Irsquove felt like I was breaking Because before Irsquod be working
out Now Irsquom stuck in this Irsquom battling mentally with everything going on Which
affected my body effects my eating sometimes Irsquoll just take the [food] tray but Irsquoll flush the
stuff down the toilet
As Kai suggests in the IMU exercise functions not only as a means to practice physical fit-
ness but also to provide structure for people to manage both their days and the mental strain of
being in isolation When asked a general question like ldquohow are you doing in the IMUrdquo many
participants like Kai referenced whether or not they were engaging in exercise as a way to
gauge how they were faring overall People like Kai shared feelings of lethargy or feeling too
overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day induced by long periods in solitary confine-
ment Their weight fluctuated during these cycles going down with regular and social exercise
routines going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exer-
cise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations high-
light the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 9 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Deprivation policies Our participants described multiple situations in which official
IMU policies and unofficial IMU practices exacerbated their physical ailments especially their
chronic health problems Such policies and practices included the prioritization of security
over care in emergency situations disruptions in care upon transfer into the IMU and over-
whelming administrative hurdles to accessing care in the first place If prisons are largely
unequipped to provide the appropriate care and environment for chronic medical problems
[67 31] our findings reveal both the specific mechanisms by which solitary confinement poli-
cies amplify the usual bureaucratic challenges of accessing healthcare in prison and the kinds
of physical health problems that go unaddressed as a result
First in cases of medical emergencies people housed in the IMU have response buttons in
their cells they can press to alert staff However many of the people we interviewed both
doubted whether staff would respond swiftly enough in an actual emergency and worried
about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response
if medical staff ultimately deemed their problem non-emergent Indeed prisoners perceived
IMU policies as systematically prioritizing incapacitation over medical attention Carl (white)
described an incident where he experienced delayed care and was pepper sprayed after having
suffered from a seizure all because he was unable to comply with orders to stand following the
episode
I had a serious seizure And I was laying on the floor and I had defecated I was laying in a
puddle of puke Well [the guards] had come to the door and I guess they had called med-
ical and they were standing there for 45 minutes yelling ldquoStand up and cuff up so we can
give you medical attentionrdquo They did not pop the door and go in there and give me medical
attention And so unknown to me they popped the cuff port and they sprayed OC [pepper
spray] in there And then they came in They noticed that I was unconscious and finally a
nurse looked at my medical file and shersquos like ldquohersquos epilepticrdquo
In the tense environment of the IMU where staff manage people with histories of violating
prison rules assaulting staff and often serious mental health needs immediate security con-
cerns readily take priority over assessing medical histories and providing healthcare
Second simply being transferred into the IMU often disrupted care in dangerous ways For
instance Julian (Hawaiian) described how when he was transferred into a new solitary con-
finement unit he had to restart the process of seeking treatment for (and even simple acknowl-
edgement of) recurring kidney stones Whereas he had fought and been able to receive x-rays
and medication to help manage his kidney pain at his prior institution he now found this fight
to be futile at his new facility ldquoTheyrsquore just going to take me out of room take me over there to
medical and theyrsquore going to be like oh herersquos the hot water or hot bag or whateverrdquo And
Tony (Native Americanwhite) described a battery of physical and mental health issuesndashan
enlarged prostate a painful cyst that needed to be surgically removed varicose veins ldquochronic
suicidal thoughtsrdquo anxiety and depressionndashall requiring medications which he had difficulty
maintaining access to in the IMU For instance he described how both his Amitriptyline
which partly treated his periodic limb movement sleep disorder and his seizure medication
Dilantin were both discontinued in the IMU resulting in serious injuries to his foot and head
Third a number of bureaucratic hurdles and barriers discouraged people in the IMU from
attempting to access healthcare at all even in potentially life-threatening situations In order to
see a medical professional people isolated in the IMU must fill out a paper request (a ldquokiterdquo)
and hand it to a correctional officer passing by or report a concern to a nurse who makes
daily rounds passing by each cell in the IMU The medical response happens either ldquocellfrontrdquo
with the person talking to the medical professional through his cell door in earshot of others
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 10 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
held in solitary confinement or ldquoby escortrdquo with the person in handcuffs and leg-cuffs if not
also belly chains and a hood usually accompanied by at least two to four correctional officers
to a medical treatment area Vitamins and over-the-counter medications like Tylenol or as-
needed medications like asthma inhalers are kept outside of the cell and available only at spec-
ified times or again by paper kite request Throughout WADOC people must pay $4 for
non-emergency medical care (unless they are indigent in which case WADOC provides care
without a co-pay) but people held in the IMU have more restrictive caps on their overall
spending for any needs including healthcare food and toiletries proportionally raising the
relative cost of seeking care for non-emergency symptoms
These policies in combination with negative perceptions about the quality of care available
to them dissuaded participants from seeking medical services Deon (Black) described new
and unfamiliar ldquobreathing problemsrdquo and rising ldquoblood pressurerdquo in IMU but felt that seeking
medical attention would be useless
Itrsquos pointless for me to knock on the window and ask the nurse ldquoHey nurse do thisrdquo
Because every time I knock on the windowndashit is pointless because the only thing the DOC
wants is money It is money I think people in the cell should be important And itrsquos a
long time but Irsquod just rather wait till I get out
Later in the interview Deon links his rising blood pressure to his isolation ldquoI never had
blood pressure problems until I went to this IMUrdquo Because Deon does not expect to be treated
with care or dignity he avoids medical treatment As a result his new breathing issues and ris-
ing blood pressure went unnoticed by medical staff and Deon did not find out the cause
Blake (white) described experiencing unfamiliar physical health symptoms in the IMU for
which he was also hopeless about receiving any medical assistance
Irsquove been told I have a heart murmur but for like last two weeks Irsquove been feeling my
heart like feeling weird like it flutters once in a while [I] just donrsquot tell nobody because
they wonrsquot do nothing about it unless yoursquore actually having a heart attack or unless you
declare a medical emergency theyrsquoll pull you out take your vitals and then charge you 4
bucks If I have a heart attack or donrsquot have a heart attack it donrsquot matter
Not only did Blake like Deon doubt whether a prison medical provider would believe him
and try to help him but he was further dissuaded from seeking treatment by the $4 institution-
ally-imposed cost for non-emergency treatment Four dollars is arguably worth much more in
prison that it would be even to a destitute person on the outside and worth more still to some-
one in the IMU Under WADOC policy people in IMU are only allowed to spend $10 per
week on store items such as coffee pastries and deodorant The $4 medical fee would absorb
nearly half of this weekly spending cap Blake might have had clinically insignificant subjective
palpitations or the onset of atrial fibrillation following an undiagnosed myocardial infarction
his confinement status rendered clarification functionally unavailable
Like many other participants Deon and Blake expressed a sense of futility about seeking
medical assistance while in the IMU dissuaded by bureaucratic hurdles from perceived dis-
missiveness and indignity (exemplified in the problem of dual loyalty [67]) to actual costs of
care Futility in turn led to non-evaluation of emerging medical problems Still Deon and
Blake expressed a passive acceptance of their situation ldquoitrsquos pointlessrdquo and ldquoit donrsquot matterrdquo
This hopelessness reflects a precarity unique to solitary confinement wondering whether med-
ications would be provided and refills renewed whether the severity of ailments would be
acknowledged and whether medical emergencies would be addressed or instead treated as
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 11 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
security threats As our participantsrsquo experiences suggest solitary confinement carries the
additional punishment of substandard access to health care
Exacerbating musculoskeletal pain Participants spoke frequently about one specific
chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain The experiences of people in
solitary confinement with chronic musculoskeletal pain reveal how the prior two categories of
symptoms we analyze those associated with deprivation conditions and those associated with
deprivation policies in solitary confinement interact to exacerbate physical health problems
While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical
injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated
and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to
them in solitary confinement
For instance Victor (Latino) described his frustrations with attempts to get care let alone
relief from the pain of his sciatica
Irsquove been told I have nothing wrong with me but I have been hurt and they took x-rays of
my back and they found that the disks are in there or something thatrsquos triggering some
nerves And I still got a little bit of time left and they just opened up an Ibuprofen right
now And that stuff doesnrsquot work So what can you do
Victorrsquos medical file highlights persistence of chronic pain in his back and hips and notes
that he avoided sitting down for longer than 5ndash10 minutes Not only did participants describe
untreated pain but they described the anxiety associated with the lack of treatment Isaac
(BlackLatino) described how he experienced both quad and hamstring pain in the IMU and
how this escalated his physical health concerns ldquoIrsquoll start thinking like oh Irsquom laying in bed
too much Maybe my muscles are starting to rot you know eating on themselvesrdquo In a similar
sentiment Tim (white) stated ldquoMy body is likendashI canrsquot explain it Like my skeleton feels like
my skeletonrsquos broken or somethingrdquo While Victor must bear persistent pain and the anxiety
that he will likely have to continue to suffer Isaac and Timrsquos experiences are more reflective of
somatization or the expression of psychological distress through physical symptoms [69]
These participants highlight the complex comorbidity between musculoskeletal pain and men-
tal health in isolation an inverse experience of physical pain Tyler (white) discussing his sco-
liosis made a direct connection between his untreated pain and his mental health ldquoMental
health and things that go through your head just because of this when you got pain shooting
up into your brain and you guys arenrsquot fixing itrdquo
Pain and anxiety in turn interfered with other aspects of IMU existence Craig (white)
described how an untreated knee injury was causing him ldquomoderate to severe painrdquo in combi-
nation with anxiety about how he would re-enter society when released directly from solitary
confinement together these experiences interfered with his everyday activities including his
ability to communicate with his family ldquoI was in the middle of actually writing my mom a let-
ter and I was going to tell her about you know they still havenrsquot done anything with my
knee I couldnrsquot write the letter anymore I just got so mad I was so mad I really couldnrsquot
even focus on anythingrdquo Craigrsquos medical file affirms his complaint documenting knee swell-
ing and chronic extension tendonitis but also indicating no abnormalities were found
People living in solitary confinement are left with very few options to effectively manage
persistent pain which appears to foster more maladaptive behavior such as rumination stress
and despair within a highly restrictive and stimuli-depleted environment [68ndash71] Along with
bearing the institutional monotony medical precariousness and procedural strictures of soli-
tary confinement onersquos own body becomes a challenge to withstand [72 73]
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 12 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
RacialEthnic disproportionalities
We now turn to reporting the race and ethnic disparities in the Washington state prison popu-
lation overall (compared to the statewide adult population) and in solitary confinement spe-
cifically (compared to the general prison population) These disparities suggest that the
various mechanisms by which solitary confinement impacts health and well-being are likely to
be disproportionately experienced across race and ethnic lines
We analyze administrative data provided by WADOC and Census Bureau population esti-
mates Black non-Latino individuals represented only 37 of adults in Washington state in
2017 but they comprised 179 of the general prison population [74] Similarly Latino indi-
viduals represented 103 of the statewide adult population but 136 of the prison popula-
tion Conversely both White non-Latinos and AsianPacific Islanders Native Americans and
mixed-race individuals (grouped within ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo) were somewhat under-repre-
sented in the general prison population relative to the statewide adult population (see Fig 1)
Differences in racial and ethnic composition of the general prison population and the state-
wide adult population are statistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Within prison walls we find evidence of further racial and ethnic disproportionalities in
housing placement Comparing those housed in restrictive IMU confinement to those housed
in the general population we find that prisoners who self-identify as ldquoLatino Any Racerdquo and
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo ethnicity are over-represented in IMU To characterize the scale of differ-
ences in the racialethnic composition of the IMU and general prison populations we calcu-
lated disproportionality or prevalence ratios as the proportion of each racialethnic group in a
given population divided by the proportion of that racialethnic group in the reference popu-
lation Here Latinos are over-represented within the IMU participant group by a factor of 17
relative to their representation in the general prison population and those grouped in the
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo category are over-represented in the IMU sample by a factor of 26 relative
to the general prison population Conversely White non-Latino individuals are under-repre-
sented in the IMU sample relative to the general prison population Likewise and in contrast
to the gross disproportionality documented in the general prison population Black non-
Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample relative to the gen-
eral prison population 113 of the IMU sample identified as Black non-Latino compared
with 179 of the general prison population The difference in the racial and ethnic composi-
tion of those in long-term solitary confinement compared with the general population was sta-
tistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Discussion
A popular analogy likens prison to a chronic illness it disrupts daily life interrupts routines
[72] spreads risk like a contagious disease [75] and models like an epidemiological problem
[76 30] While the study of the physical effects of incarceration has developed over the last
decade there is a serious gap in the literature in understanding the experiences and outcomes
of physical health in isolation We are just beginning to understand the medical correlates of
solitary confinement their comorbidity with mental health and overall implications for pris-
onersrsquo suffering [72] Integrating surveys interviews BPRS scores medical and disciplinary
file reviews and administrative data the scale and array of our research represents one of the
more robust studies of solitary confinement to date [20] The multi-method research presented
here offers a first step not only towards understanding some typical medical problems of soli-
tary confinement but also towards understanding the analytical challenges of an environment
in which physical and psychological problems are immediately concomitant and objective
clarification is often unavailable
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 13 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Fig 1 Racial and ethnic composition of IMU sample general prison population and Washington State 2017 US Census Bureau
Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and
States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun dagger Authorsrsquo calculations The total prison population file included 17943 individuals in
DOC prison custody on July 1 2017 For comparison purposes the ldquogeneral prison populationrdquo excludes those returned to prison on
violations of release or sentence conditions those in an IMU unit on the index date and those on a maximum custody status (n = 1970)
as well as those in the IMU sample (n = 106) Dagger No significant differences in racialethnic composition were found between the IMU
sample and larger IMU population on the index date using raceethnicity data from DOC These data reflect self-reported raceethnicity
during participant interviews ^ OtherUnknown includes individuals of two or more races AsianPacific Islander Native American
Alaska Native and unknown raceethnicity information
httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510g001
We find that solitary confinement constitutes not just a mental but also a physical health
risk It exacerbates well-documented physical health ldquosymptomsrdquo of incarceration from dis-
ruptions of daily life and routines to undiagnosed untreated or mis-treated ailments [1 30
38] These initial symptoms in turn produce other risks to the extent respondents are accu-
rately reporting weight fluctuations in solitary confinement this physical symptom has detri-
mental health implications weight fluctuation itself is associated with adverse cardiovascular
and psychological outcomes [77 78] Likewise musculoskeletal pain increases multimorbidity
and its sequelae are tightly unified in their impact on disability [79]
These health concerns likely have a grossly disparate impact on communities of color just
as incarceration is a health stratifying institution for prisoners their families and communi-
ties so too does solitary confinement appear to exacerbate racial health inequities While we
find that Black non-Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample
relative to the general prison population we find that Latino and OtherMixed Race prisoners
are disproportionately over-represented in solitary confinement in WADOC just as other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 14 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
studies have documented disproportionately high representations of racial and ethnic minori-
ties in other statesrsquo uses of solitary confinement [22 41 43] We further find that prisoners of
all races describe similar physical health challenges and complaints while in solitary confine-
ment In sum people of color face a disproportionate risk of being placed in solitary confine-
ment such racial disparities in turn mean that the physical health symptoms associated with
or possibly caused by these conditions of confinement are likely to fall disproportionately on
certain groups Though we do not explore other risk factors for over-representation in solitary
confinement in this paper we and others have documented serious mental illness [20 80]
transgender identification [81] and pregnant women [82] as particularly vulnerable to both
incarceration and solitary confinement suggesting additional sub-groups who might face dis-
proportionate and unique risks of physical health problems in solitary confinement
If anything the evidence we present here understates the prevalence and intensity of the symp-
toms we document First Washington State is a progressive system actively engaged in both limit-
ing the application and the duration of solitary confinement and developing measures to mitigate
its harmful effects from better mental health training for correctional staff to more sustained
group contact for prisoners in IMUs conditions and their physical effects are undoubtedly
worse in many if not most other states [20 42 44] Second the BPRS somatic concerns scores
we present focus on the two weeks prior to assessment so likely underrepresent the cumulative
incidence of somatic concerns in the study sample over time Third our exceptionally large ran-
dom sample size for an in-depth mixed methods study of a solitary confinement population was
still not powered to establish statistically significant differences between interview subjects in the
IMU in year one (2017) and those out of the IMU in year two (2018)ndashotherwise important com-
parison groups for understanding differences in either somatic concerns measures or physical
symptom specifications Fourth both the Washington state population and state prison popula-
tion have proportionately more white people than some other states and prisons where racial dis-
parities in both prison and solitary confinement may be even more significant
While our findings do not establish either how prevalent the symptoms and mechanisms of
suffering we specified are among people in solitary confinement as compared to the general
prison population or whether solitary confinement in fact directly causes these symptoms
recent research suggests that at least some of the symptoms our respondents reported like
hypertension are significantly associated with long-term isolation [83 45] Although the evi-
dence is clear that solitary confinement poses serious health risks [54 45] our research high-
lights the importance of continuing to document and analyze these risks especially from a
multi-method perspective triangulating administrative population-level data with objective
scales like the BPRS subjective descriptions of experiences from surveys and interviews and
corroboration from medical file reviews
First documenting physical health problems provides a critical means to elucidate the sever-
ity of deprivations in treatment environmental conditions and exercise and nutrition [84 85]
inherent in solitary confinement If incarceration is experienced fundamentally through control
and restriction of the body this is all the more true in solitary confinement where prisoners are
subjected to extreme forms of control while being entirely reliant on others for accessing basic
necessities from food to healthcare Our participants experienced the deprivations of solitary
confinement as exacerbating their health problems which shaped their health experiences as
punitive Otherwise medically trivial conditions quickly become grave in solitary ldquodandruffrdquo
can become a bleeding scalp wound a four-dollar co-payment blurs the difference between sub-
jective palpitations and an unstable arrhythmia and unused muscles ldquorotrdquo Physical suffering
reveals itself to be a crucial dimension of experience in solitary confinement
Second to the extent physical symptoms in particular are more familiar more readily
labeled and less stigmatized than mental health issues they may provide a window into other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 15 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
less physically tangible pains of confinement in solitary or elsewhere [84 85] The visuality of
spectacular forms of suffering in carceral institutions is only made possible by and through
mundane phenomenon that our participants elucidate through their discussions of everyday
physical experiences [86] Indeed attending to peoplersquos physical health in solitary confinement
reveals the irreducible relationship between the body mental health and highly restrictive
conditions of confinement Whether they exercise to the point of physical debilitation to keep
their minds busy refuse to eat because they do not trust their food is safe or avoid medical
care out of a hopelessness of being treated with dignity the physical and psychological are inti-
mately bounded in peoplersquos experiences in prison Examining physical suffering in solitary
confinement then becomes a tool for understanding suffering in prison more broadly and
especially the comorbidity of physical and mental suffering
Third the challenges we document in identifying and specifying physical symptoms in soli-
tary confinement reveal not just the interrelationship between symptoms conditions and poli-
cies but institutional mechanisms exacerbating both the identification and treatment of
physical problems in prison In many cases our respondents had no hope of establishing what
was physically wrong with them let alone whether the conditions of their confinement caused
the physical ailments because they either could not get or avoided medical treatment While
both community standard and continuity of care is an issue in prison generally [67] solitary
confinement widens these service gaps The phenomenon of dual loyalty which describes how
the patient-provider relationship within prison can be subsumed by correctional directives of
control and mistrust of incarcerated people [67] is acutely relevant in the context of solitary
confinement where both control and mistrust are especially prevalent [87 88]
In sum examining solitary confinement and documenting its affects provides an important
magnifying lens for understanding prison and its affects more broadly not only in elucidating
the mechanisms of harm but also in developing responses to mitigate these harms Ninety-five
percent or more of all prisoners will eventually return home to our communities [4 5] and
many will have spent time in solitary confinement Nearly one-in-five people in prison spends
time in solitary confinement each year and one-in-ten spends 30 days or more in these condi-
tions [3] These numbers will only increase in the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic
which has justified facility-wide ldquolockdownsrdquo imposing restrictions similar to those in soli-
tary-confinement in prisons across the United States as well as actual solitary confinement
placements for infected and exposed prisoners [89] To the extent that solitary confinement
undercuts treatment and care in and beyond prison it undermines the public health of those
incarcerated and those returning to our communities
Supporting information
S1 Text IMU survey
(PDF)
S2 Text Interview instrument
(DOC)
S1 Checklist Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ) 32-item
checklist
(DOCX)
S1 Quotations
(DOCX)
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 16 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Author Contributions
Conceptualization Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter
Formal analysis Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Methodology Justin D Strong Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Project administration Justin D Strong
Writing ndash original draft Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca
Tublitz Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie
Pifer Thomas R Blair
Writing ndash review amp editing Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Dallas Augustine Melissa Bar-
ragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie Pifer Thomas R Blair
References
1 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary confinement A systematic critique Crime and Justice
2018 Mar 1 47(1)365ndash416
2 Massoglia M Pridemore WA Incarceration and health Annu Rev Sociol 2015 Aug 14 41291ndash310
httpsdoiorg101146annurev-soc-073014-112326 PMID 30197467
3 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 [Internet] Washington DC US
Department of Justice 2015 [cited 2020 July 14] 1 p Available from httpwwwncjrsgovApp
publicationsabstractaspxID=271350
4 Administrators Association of State Correctional Administrators Yale Law School Arthur Liman Public
Interest Program Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of
prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms New
Haven 2016 Nov [cited 2020 July 14] 106 p Available from httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfiles
areacenterlimandocumentaimingtoreduceticpdf
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and social justice New York New York Oxford University Press 2011 320 p
6 Haney C Lynch M Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and solitary
confinement NYU Rev L amp Soc Change 1997 23(4)477ndash570
7 Grassian S Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Wash UJL amp Polrsquoy 2006 22325ndash84
8 Kupers TA What to do with the survivors Coping with the long-term effects of isolated confinement
Crim Justice Behav 2008 Aug 35(8)1005ndash16
9 Griffin E Breaking menrsquos minds Behavior control and human experimentation at the federal prison in
marion J of Prisoners on Prison 1993 4(2)1ndash8 Formatted Online Version 2006 Available at http
jpporgdocumentsback20issuesJPP_4_2_TEXTpdf
10 Heron W The pathology of boredom Sc Am 1957 Jan 196(1)52ndash57
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12 Guenther L Solitary confinement Social death and its afterlives Minneapolis University of Minnesota
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(8)985ndash1004
15 Grassian S Psychopathological effects of solitary confinement Am J Psychiatry 1983 Nov 140
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16 Grassian S Friedman N Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confine-
ment Intl J Law and Psychiatry 1986 Jan 1 8(1)49ndash65
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confinement is associated with post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms among individuals recently
released from prison J of Urban Health 2018 Apr 1 95(2)141ndash48
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 17 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
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effects of administrative segregation [Internet] Colorado Springs Colorado Department of Corrections
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19 Walters GD Checking the Math Do Restrictive Housing and Mental Health Need Add Up to Psycholog-
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Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018 Am J Public
Health 2020 Jan 110(S1)S56ndash62 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2019305375 PMID 31967876
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Sociological Quarterly 1996 Jan 1 37(1)105ndash25
25 Lillie-Blanton M Laveist T Raceethnicity the social environment and health Soc Sci Med 1996 Jul
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26 Western B Punishment and inequality in America New York New York Russell Sage Foundation
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Annu Rev Sociol 1995 Aug 21(1)349ndash86
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org101007s11524-011-9614-1 PMID 21915745
30 Wildeman C Wang EA Mass incarceration public health and widening inequality in the USA Lancet
2017 Apr 8 389(10077)1464ndash74 httpsdoiorg101016S0140-6736(17)30259-3 PMID 28402828
31 Rich JD Wakeman SE Dickman SL Medicine and the epidemic of incarceration in the United States
N Engl J Med 2011 Jun 2 364(22)2081ndash83 httpsdoiorg101056NEJMp1102385 PMID 21631319
32 Baillargeon J Black SA Pulvino J Dunn K The disease profile of Texas prison inmates Ann Epidemiol
2000 Feb 1 10(2)74ndash80 httpsdoiorg101016s1047-2797(99)00033-2 PMID 10691060
33 Solomon L Flynn C Muck K Vertefeuille J Prevalence of HIV syphilis hepatitis B and hepatitis C
among entrants to Maryland correctional facilities J Urban Health 2004 Mar 1 81(1)25ndash37 httpsdoi
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34 Ojikutu BO Srinivasan S Bogart LM Subramanian SV Mayer KH Mass incarceration and the impact
of prison release on HIV diagnoses in the US South PloS one 2018 Jun 11 13(6)e0198258 https
doiorg101371journalpone0198258 PMID 29889837
35 Massoglia M Incarceration as exposure the prison infectious disease and other stress-related ill-
nesses J Health Soc Behav 2008 Mar 49(1)56ndash71 httpsdoiorg101177002214650804900105
PMID 18418985
36 Houle B The effect of incarceration on adult male BMI trajectories USA 1981ndash2006 J Racial Ethn
Health Disparities 2014 Mar 1 1(1)21ndash8 httpsdoiorg101007s40615-013-0003-1 PMID 24812594
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and family history of criminal justice system involvement New York City 2017 Am J Public Health
2020 Mar(0)e1ndash7
39 Fox AD Anderson MR Bartlett G Valverde J MacDonald RF Shapiro LI et al A description of an
urban transitions clinic serving formerly incarcerated persons J Health Care Poor Underserved 2014
Feb 25(1)376ndash82 httpsdoiorg101353hpu20140039 PMID 24509032
40 Nowotny KM Kuptsevych-Timmer A Health and justice framing incarceration as a social determinant
of health for Black men in the United States Sociol Compass 2018 Mar 12(3)e12566
41 Tasca M Turanovic J Examining race and gender disparities in restrictive housing placement Wash-
ing DC (US) National Institute of Justice 2018 21 p Report No 252062
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PLOS ONE The body in isolation
42 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States
Am J Public Health 2015 Jan 105(1)18ndash26 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2014302205 PMID 25393185
43 Schlanger M Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial disparities
Mich J Race amp L 2012 18(1)241ndash50
44 Reiter KA Parole snitch or die Californiarsquos supermax prisons and prisoners 1997ndash2007 Punishm
Soc 2012 Dec 14(5)530ndash63
45 Williams BA Li A Ahalt C Coxson P Kahn JG Bibbins-Domingo K The cardiovascular health burdens
of solitary confinement J Gen Intern Med 2019 Oct 1 34(10)1977ndash80 httpsdoiorg101007
s11606-019-05103-6 PMID 31228050
46 Dye MH Deprivation importation and prison suicide combined effects of institutional conditions and
inmate composition J Crim Justice 2010 Jul 1 38(4)796ndash806
47 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S Hadler J Lee D Alper H et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-
harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014 Mar 104(3)442ndash7 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH
2013301742 PMID 24521238
48 Lobel J Akil H Law amp neuroscience The case of solitary confinement Daedalus 2018 Oct1 47(4)61ndash75
49 Zigmond MJ Smeyne RJ Use of animals to study the neurobiological effects of isolation In Lobel J
Smith PS editors Solitary confinement Effects practices and pathways toward reform New York
Oxford University Press 2020 [cited 2020 Jul 14] Chapter 13
50 Stahn AC Gunga HC Kohlberg E Gallinat J Dinges DF Kuhn S Brain changes in response to long
Antarctic expeditions N Engl J Med 2019 Dec 5 381(23)2273ndash5 httpsdoiorg101056
NEJMc1904905 PMID 31800997
51 Smith DG Neuroscientists make a case against solitary confinement prolonged social isolation can do
severe long-lasting damage to the brain Scientific American Mind 2018 Nov 9 [cited 2020 Jul 14]
Available from httpswwwscientificamericancomarticleneuroscientists-make-a-case-against-
solitary-confinement
52 Ranapurwala SI Shanahan ME Alexandridis AA Proescholdbell SK Naumann RB Edwards D Jr
et al Opioid overdose mortality among former North Carolina inmates 2000ndash2015 Am J Public Health
2018 Sep 108(9)1207ndash13 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2018304514 PMID 30024795
53 Wildeman C Andersen LH Solitary confinement placement and post-release mortality risk among for-
merly incarcerated individuals a population-based study Lancet Public Health 2020 Feb 1 5(2)e107ndash
13 httpsdoiorg101016S2468-2667(19)30271-3 PMID 32032555
54 Brinkley-Rubinstein L Sivaraman J Rosen DL Cloud DH Junker G Proescholdbell S et al Associa-
tion of restrictive housing during incarceration with mortality after release JAMA Netw Open 2019 Oct
2 2(10)e1912516 Available from httpsjamanetworkcomjournalsjamanetworkopenarticle-
abstract2752350 httpsdoiorg101001jamanetworkopen201912516 PMID 31584680
55 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional populations in the United States 2016 Washington DC Depart-
ment of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 14 p Report No NCJ
251211
56 Phipps PA Gagliardi GJ Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and ser-
vices Interim Report Olympia WA Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 May 37 p
Report No 03-05-1901
57 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J of Public Health 2005 Oct 95
(10)1692ndash5
58 Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates Santa Monica CA The
Rand Corporation 1982 Nov Report No N-1635-NIJ
59 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berke-
ley CA University of California Press 2014
60 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up meth-
ods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs 2009 Sep 70
(5)751ndash61 httpsdoiorg1015288jsad200970751 PMID 19737500
61 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach popula-
tion Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2016 May 17 113(20)5477ndash85
62 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation
and normalization in Danish prisons Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
63 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis Thousand
Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
64 Chun Tie Y Birks M Francis K Grounded theory research A design framework for novice researchers
SAGE open medicine 2019 Jan 71ndash8
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 19 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
65 Berzofsky M and Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) Sample Design Evaluation and Rec-
ommendations Washington DC US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017
66 Nwosu BU Maranda L Berry R Colocino B Flores CD Sr Folkman K et al The vitamin D status of
prison inmates PloS one 2014 Mar 5 9(3)e90623 httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0090623
PMID 24598840
67 Pont J Enggist S Stover H Williams B Greifinger R Wolff H Prison health care governance guaran-
teeing clinical independence American journal of public health 2018 Apr 108(4)472ndash6 httpsdoiorg
102105AJPH2017304248 PMID 29470125
68 Brosschot JF Gerin W Thayer JF The perseverative cognition hypothesis A review of worry pro-
longed stress-related physiological activation and health Journal of psychosomatic research 2006
Feb 1 60(2)113ndash24 httpsdoiorg101016jjpsychores200506074 PMID 16439263
69 Stemmet L Roger D Kuntz J Borrill J Ruminating about the past or ruminating about the futuremdash
which has the bigger impact on health An exploratory study Current Psychology 2018 Jan 13 1ndash7
70 Laws B Crewe B Emotion regulation among male prisoners Theoretical Criminology 2016 Nov 20
(4)529ndash47
71 Greer K Walking an emotional tightrope Managing emotions in a womenrsquos prison Symbolic Interac-
tion 2002 Feb 25(1)117ndash39
72 Choudhry K Armstrong D Dregan A Prisons and Embodiment Self-Management Strategies of an
Incarcerated Population Journal of Correctional Health Care 2019 Oct 25(4)338ndash50 httpsdoiorg
1011771078345819880240 PMID 31722608
73 Western B Homeward Life in the year after prison Russell Sage Foundation 2018 May 4
74 US Census Bureau Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age
Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun
75 Lum K Swarup S Eubank S Hawdon J The contagious nature of imprisonment an agent-based
model to explain racial disparities in incarceration rates Journal of the Royal Society Interface 2014
Sep 6 11(98)20140409
76 Dumont DM Brockmann B Dickman S Alexander N Rich JD Public health and the epidemic of incar-
ceration Annual review of public health 2012 Apr 21 33325ndash39 httpsdoiorg101146annurev-
publhealth-031811-124614 PMID 22224880
77 Zhang Y Hou F Li J Yu H Li L Hu S et al The association between weight fluctuation and all-cause
mortality A systematic review and meta-analysis Medicine 2019 Oct 98(42)
78 Soslashrensen TI Rissanen A Korkeila M Kaprio J Intention to lose weight weight changes and 18-y mor-
tality in overweight individuals without co-morbidities PLoS medicine 2005 Jun 28 2(6)e171 https
doiorg101371journalpmed0020171 PMID 15971946
79 Blyth FM Briggs AM Schneider CH Hoy DG March LM The global burden of musculoskeletal painmdash
where to from here American journal of public health 2019 Jan 01 09(1)35ndash40
80 Patler C Sacha JO Branic N The black box within a black box Solitary confinement practices in a sub-
set of US immigrant detention facilities Journal of Population Research 2018 Dec 354 httpsdoi
org101007s12546-018-9209-8
81 Andasheva F Arenrsquot I a Woman Deconstructing Sex Discrimination and Freeing Transgender Women
from Solitary Confinement FIU L Rev 2016 12117
82 Knittel AK Resolving health disparities for women involved in the criminal justice system North Carolina
medical journal 2019 Nov 01 80(6)363ndash6 httpsdoiorg1018043ncm806363 PMID 31685574
83 Hawkley Test Ashker v Governor of California No 409-cv-05796-CW (ND California 2015)
84 Sexton L Penal subjectivities Developing a theoretical framework for penal consciousness Punish-
ment amp Society 2015 Jan 17(1)114ndash36
85 Crewe B Warr J Bennett P Smith A The emotional geography of prison life Theoretical Criminology
2014 Feb 18(1)56ndash74
86 Corcoran MS Spectacular suffering Transgressive performance in penal activism Theoretical Crimi-
nology 2019 Jan 11 httpsdoiorg1011771362480618819796
87 Glowa-Kollisch S Graves J Dickey N MacDonald R Rosner Z Waters A et al Data- driven human
rights using dual loyalty trainings to promote the care of vulnerable patients in jail Health Hum Rights
2015 Jun 1 17(1)124ndash35
88 Blair TR Reiter KA Letter to the editor and author response Solitary confinement and mental illness
Perspectives 2015 Jul 2
89 Cloud D Augustine D Ahalt C Williams B The ethical use of medical isolationndashnot solitary confine-
mentndashto reduce COVID-19 transmission in correctional settings AMEND 2020 April
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 20 20
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE
See next page
112
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
Psychological Distress in Solitary Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018
Keramet Reiter PhD JD Joseph Ventura PhD David Lovell PhD MSW Dallas Augustine MA Melissa Barragan MA Thomas Blair MD MS Kelsie Chesnut MA Pasha Dashtgard MA EdM Gabriela Gonzalez MA Natalie Pifer PhD JD and Justin Strong MA
Objectives To specify symptoms and measure prevalence of psychological distress among incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement
Methods We gathered data via semistructured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric
Rating Scale (BPRS) assessments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for 106 randomly selected people in solitary confinement in the Washington State
Department of Corrections in 2017 We performed 1-year follow-up interviews
and BPRS assessments with 80 of these incarcerated people and we present the
results of our qualitative content analysis and descriptive statistics Results BPRS results showed clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety or
guilt among half of our research sample Administrative data showed disproportionately
high rates of serious mental illness and self-harming behavior compared with general prison populations Interview content analysis revealed additional symptoms including
social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity Conclusions Our coordinated study of rating scale interview and administrative data
illustrates the public health crisis of solitary confinement Because 95 or more of all incarcerated people including those who experienced solitary confinement are even-tually released understanding disproportionate psychopathology matters for de-veloping prevention policies and addressing the unique needs of people who have
experienced solitary confinement an extreme element of mass incarceration (Am J
Public Health 2020110S56ndashS62 doi102105AJPH2019305375)
few procedural protections limited available alternative responses and no external over-sight2 Researchers and policymakers are therefore limited not only in access to data and populations but also by these populationsrsquo fluidity
A standard instrument for assessing psy-chological impacts of incarceration is the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) Originally developed to rate the severity of symptoms in hospitalized psychiatric patients and track changes in status over time1314 the BPRS is increasingly used for research within carceral settings12151617 The current scale assesses 24 observable or self-reported symptoms Extensive research on the BPRSrsquos reliability and validity confirms its efficacy in identify-ing indicators of serious mental illness14
In Washington State interviewers ad-ministered the BPRS to a random sample of 87 incarcerated people during qualitative interviews (and also conducted 122 medical chart reviews)1915 concluding that solitary confinement reveals ldquoa concentration of some of the most important negative effects of the entire prison complexrdquo1(p1692) In a widely cited subsequent study in Colorado the BPRS was included in a battery of tests designed to measure psychological ldquocon-structsrdquo associated with solitary confinement (for 270 matched participants) but generated
Long-term solitary confinement expanded across the United States in the 1980s by
1997 nearly every state had built a ldquosuper-maxrdquo creating an estimated total of 20 000 new solitary cells12 Human rights agencies characterize the practice as torture34 policy analysts criticize it as expensive and ineffec-tive24 Yet the epidemiological basis for understanding solitary confinement is weak Current estimates of the annual US solitary confinement population vary from 80 000 to 250 00056 Likewise the conditions (how much isolation with how few privileges) purposes (discipline protection or institu-tional security) and labels (administrative segregation supermax restrictive housing intensive management) defining solitary confinement are contested256 Many studies document psychological harms of
S56 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al
segregation including associations between solitary confinement and self-harm anxiety depression paranoia and aggression among other symptoms7ndash9 but other recent find-ings suggest that psychological impacts are limited10ndash12 Correctional officials use solitary confinement at their discretion often with
ABOUT THE AUTHORS Keramet Reiter is with the Department of Criminology Law and Society and the School of Law University of California Irvine Joseph Ventura is with the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles David Lovell is with the School of Nursing University of Washington Seattle Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut and Gabriela Gonzalez are doctoral candidates in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Thomas Blair is with the Department of Psychiatry Southern California Permanente Medical Group Downey Pasha Dashtgard is a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological Science University of California Irvine Natalie Pifer is with the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice University of Rhode Island Kingston Justin Strong is a doctoral student in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine
Correspondence should be sent to Keramet Reiter 3373 Social Ecology II Irvine CA 92697 (e-mail reiterkuciedu) Reprints can be ordered at httpwwwajphorg by clicking the ldquoReprintsrdquo link
This article was accepted September 5 2019 doi 102105AJPH2019305375
AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
few reliable results The study relied on a pencil-and-paper test the Brief Symptom Inventory ldquoa 53-item self-report measure to assess a broad range of psychological symptomsrdquo and concluded that people in solitary confinement sometimes experienced improvements in their psychological well-being and those with mental illnesses did not deteriorate over time11(p52)
Our study builds on these investigations relying not only on psychometric instruments but also on mental and physical health and dis-ciplinary records and in-depth interview data to assess the psychological well-being of 106 ran-domly sampled incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections (WADOC) from 2017 to 2018 Triangulation of sources gives this study a robust basis for understanding the psy-chological effects of solitary confinement
METHODS WADOC is a midsized (39th highest rate
of incarceration in the United States) fully state-funded correctional system with a long history of inviting academic researchers to independently evaluate carceral practice191819
Fieldwork was conducted over 2 separate 3-week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team mem-bers (9 women and 4 men) all affiliated with the University of California Irvine In total 106 incarcerated people were inter-viewed in 2017 and 80 incarcerated people were reinterviewed in 2018 We also collected medical and disciplinary data including serious mental illness (SMI) and self-harm data
Sample and Data Collections WADOC has 5 geographically dispersed
intensive management units (IMUs) people in these all-male units have usually violated an in-prison rule and are in solitary confinement for durations ranging from months to years with highly restricted access to phones radios televisions time out of cell and visitors As a result of WADOC efforts to reform and re-duce IMU use the population in these units fluctuated with a high of more than 600 (in 2011) to a low of 286 incarcerated people (in 2015) on ldquomaximum custodyrdquo status for indeterminate terms contingent on meeting
specific benchmarks20 In 2017 when the initial sample for this research was drawn there were 363 maximum custody status people assigned to the IMU
We selected participants from a randomly ordered list in proportion to the population of each IMU accounting for 29 of the total population in each of the 5 units For recruitment and consent processes see Ap-pendix A (available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg) The interview refusal rate was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people921
The 96-question semistructured interview instrument included a range of questions used in previous studies on incarcerated peoplersquos experiences2223 covering condi-tions of daily life physical and mental health treatment and IMU programming BPRS self-report items were embedded throughout the interview we evaluated observational items immediately following each in-terview24 Interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 3 hours
Following interviews participants were given an option to consent to medical file reviews and to participate in 1-year follow-up interviews All participants consented to rein-terviews and all but 2 participants (n = 104) consented to medical file reviews Following year-1 interviews WADOC provided elec-tronic administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants (along with comparable population-level data for the prison system in 2017)
In summer 2018 the research team returned to Washington and reconsented and reinterviewed every available participant mdashnotably including those no longer housed in the IMUmdashfor a total of 80 reinterviews Because of refusals (n = 4) institutional trans-fers and parole (n = 21) and 1 death we were unable to follow-up with 26 respondents (25) This drop-out rate is low compared with similar studies2526 Follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 2 hours The condensed year-2 instrument contained ap-proximately 70 questions with variation by current housing status
For the steps taken to protect vulnerable imprisoned research participants and details of the training research team members com-pleted establishing high interrater reliability in administering the BPRS24 see Appendix A
(available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg)
Data Analysis All interviews were assigned a randomly
generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed in Microsoft Word (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details (names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software De-velopment GmbH Berlin Germany) for analysis See Appendix A for an explanation of the thematically grounded open-coding process27 We entered all BPRS paper rating sheets completed following year-1 and year-2 interviews into Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) We linked each participantrsquos BPRS rating by random identifier to extracted data from qualitative interviews medical file reviews and administrative data from WADOC
Relevant variables extracted from ad-ministrative health data included SMI a critical classification because it implies that treatment is medically necessary and there-fore is an obligation of the prison system while the person is under its care WADOC operationally defines SMI by standardized criteria combining diagnosis medication and frequency of psychiatric encounters and history of suicide attempts or other self-harm
We then imported BPRS and other administrative data into SPSS version 26 (IBM Armonk NY) to generate descriptive statistics including prevalence of clinically significant ratings on BPRS items and factors (subscales of co-occurring symptom groups) including positive symptoms (un-usual thought content hallucinations con-ceptual disorganization) negative symptoms (blunted affect emotional withdrawal motor retardation) depression-anxiety-guilt symptoms (including somatic concerns DAGS) and mania (excitability elevated mood hyperactivity distractibility)14 We ran correlational analyses (cross-tabs and t test) to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings and other independent assess-ments of well-being such as existing diagnosis of SMI
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mdash
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RESULTS See Table 1 for summary characteristics of
the all-male participant population (there are
TABLE 1 Characteristics of Sample of People in Solitary Confinement Compared With General Prison Population Washington State Department of Corrections 2017
no women in IMUs in WADOC) and the IMU Population (n = 106) General Population (n = 16 465)a
general WADOC population As in other Age y studies of solitarily confined incarcerated Mean 35 40 people6 our sample was generally younger Median 34 38 more violent (in terms of criminal history) and Range 20ndash65 18ndash94 serving longer sentences than those in the general population Latinos and gang affiliates are both overrepresented in our IMU sample likely because of the salience of conflicts among rival Latino factions as an institutional security concern2 Although our IMU par-ticipants differed from the general prison population there were no significant differences in either demographic variables or criminal history characteristics between our random
Raceethnicity (no)
White
African American
Latino
Other
IMU length of stay
Mean
Median
Range
42 (44)
12 (12)
23 (24)
23 (24)
145 mo
6 mo
lt 1 wkndash151 mo
59 (9746)
18 (2935)
14 (2276)
9 (1508)
sample and the overall IMU population Current offense category (no)
except that our participant pool was slightly Murder and manslaughter 17 (18) 16 (2623)
older than the overall IMU population Sex offenses 12 (13) 19 (3195)
Robbery and assault 57 (60) 34 (5608)
Property offenses 8 (9) 18 (2933) Range and Prevalence of Drugs or other 6 (6) 13 (2106)
Psychological Symptoms Identified Prison convictionsb
Our initial sample of 106 participants had a Mean 5 4 mean BPRS rating of 37 and a median rating Median 4 3 of 33 (possible range from 24 to 168) sug- Range 1ndash18 1ndash27 gesting mild psychiatric symptoms among the study population at the time of our inter-views14 However analysis of individual scale items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms (Table 2) Further analysis of BPRS factors as opposed to individual items provided
Prison length of stay mo
Mean
Median
Range
Ever in prison gangc (no)
Yes
No
Missing
103
72
3ndash456
60 (64)
36 (38)
4 (4)
97
45
2ndash600
32 (5410)
68 (11 659)
additional evidence of clinically significant Serious mental illnessd (no) 19 (16) 9 (1589)
psychiatric distress in as much as half of the Self-harm attempte (no) 18 (17) Not available population sampled (ie DAGS factor Suicide attempte (no) 22 (22) Not available Table 2)
Administrative data support the finding Note IMU = intensive management unit
of long-term psychological distress Among aGeneral population data excludes 761 categories returned to prison for techn
nonsentenced and 718 resentencical violations of conditions on un
ed incarcerated people Both derlying drug or sex offenses
our respondents 19 had SMI designations a politically selective and narrow set of offenses that would distort the general population primary
22 had a documented suicide attempt and offense profile
18 had documentation of other self-harm bNumber of convictions to prison excluding out-of-state convictions often significant for IMU residents
all at some point during their incarceration cGang status was self-reported Figure is calculated from 102 respondents
ided for 85 respondents figure i
who disclosed this information
either before or during their time in the IMU dSerious mental illness data were prov s calculated from this sample
(Table 1) Moreover respondents with SMI eSelf-harm and suicide data were provided for 94 respondents figure is calculated from this sample
designations were much more likely to re-port positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms Qualitative interview data revealed and will be considered exhaustively in sub-than non-SMI respondents (Table 3) These symptoms not otherwise captured by the sequent analyses) Two classes of symptoms
ndentsfindings support the validity of the BPRS BPRS and medical files (Such data will be were reported by a majority of respoassessments used illustratively here for reasons of space descriptions of the severity of the emotional
S58 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
mdash
ndash
mdash
ndash
TABLE 2 Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Symptom and Factor Prevalence Washington State Department of Corrections 2017 2018
IMU 2017 (n = 106) (No) IMU 2018 (n = 28) (No) Non-IMU 2018 (n = 52) (No)
Symptomsa
Depression 2450 (26)
Anxiety 2450 (26)
Somatic concern 1510 (16)
Guilt 1790 (19)
Hostility 1130 (12)
Hallucinations 940 (10)
Excitement 1040 (11)
2500 (7) 1538 (8)
3214 (9) 2885 (15)
2143 (6) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 1731 (9)
1429 (4) 1154 (6)
1429 (4) 769 (4)
Factorsb
Positive 1600 (17) 1786 (5) 1154 (6) stitution taking over their identity
Negative 470 (5) 0 (0) 192 (1) Irsquove been in the hole so long that it defines the DAGS 4910 (52) 5357 (15) 3654 (19) person If yoursquove been in the box for so long you Mania 1700 (18) 1481 (4) 1731 (9) canrsquot play well with others Wersquore so confined
Note DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization IMU = intensive management unit in that box Itrsquos like a safety blanket (Eli)
mania = elevated memotional withdrawal and motor retarand conceptual disorganization aOnly clinically significant symptoms (raof the sample are presented
ood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement dation positive = hallucinations unu
ting of 4 or higher) that were repor
negative = blunted affect sual thought content
ted by 10 or more
Another respondent echoed a frequent complaint about the lack of mirrors con-tributing to the loss of identity
bFactors combine 3
toll of being in the cumulatively the times) and feeling
or 4 different symptoms that are
IMU (80 of respondents topic was mentioned 359 s of social isolation (73
commonly associated
And this quotatiisolation
Yoursquore not around
with one another14
on exemplifies social
people Irsquom around
This IMU has mirrors in the cell The majority of them do not And it gets really stressful when you canrsquot even see your own reflection I mean when you canrsquot even look at yourself you lose some of your self-identity (Eric)
of respondents cmentioned 192 ticerpt exemplifies descriptions
I bet you couldnrsquot the stuff you got tpain Therersquos a lo[and] Irsquove been doadapt to their surrthis life I donrsquot [tpseudonym as wi
TABLE 3 SerioPrevalence Was
Positive
Negative
DAGS
umulatively the t
the ldquoemotional t
walk in my shoes beo endure behind these walls of t you got to go through ing this for 11 years oundings but to get hink] you can (Michth all subsequent qu
us Mental Illness Shington State De
SMI (n
opic was mes) This interview ex-
ollrdquo
cause all
people used to ael a otations)
tatus and 20partment of
= 16) (No
50 (8)
630 (1)
5630 (9)
somebody right noand shackles on like dehumanizing No human being I feel land it does have an while yoursquore sitting
Two additional alent as other clinicitems like anxiety hypersensitivity (16
17 Brief Psychiatric
)
w with handcuffs Irsquom an animal Itrsquos human contact As [a] ike wersquore meant to socialize effect on your mentality in the cell (Chase)
symptoms were as prev-ally significant BPRS references to sensory of respondents
Rating Scale Factor Corrections 2017 2018
Non-SMI (n = 69) (No
1014 (7)
440 (3)
4780 (33)
Comparing Symptoms in and out of Solitary Confinement (2018)
Of the 80 respondents reinterviewed in the second year of this study 28 were in IMU custody and 52 were in the general prison population These 2 subpopulations provide important comparison groups between IMU residents and people in the general popula-tion because all initially entered the study through a random sample of IMU residents These subpopulations also provide a longi-tudinal view of how incarcerated people experience IMU conditions over 1 year and how they recover from these conditions ) as they re-enter the general population In Table 2 we compare cumulatively by sub-population symptom and factor scores in 2017 for IMU residents to 2018 scores for
Mania
Populationa
Note DAGS = deprehyperactivity and excitement negative positive = hallucinatmental illness aMental health data
ssion anxiety guilt
1875 (3)
1880 (16)
= blunted affeht content anions unusual thoug
were available only for 85 of 10
and somatization mania = elevated mct emotional withdrawd conceptual disorgan
13 (9)
8120 (69)
ood distractibility motor al and motor retardation ization SMI = serious
6 sampled incarcerated people
IMU respondents and respondents not in the IMU For respondents still in the IMU in 2018 all clinically significant symptoms that were prevalent among at least 10 of the pop-ulation were at least as prevalent in 2018 and 2 clinically significant factor scores were more prevalent (positive DAGS) For respondents
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mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Respondents discussed hy-persensitivity to sounds smells ldquo[and ] tiny thingsrdquo (Giovanni) In particular the sounds of doors opening and closing aggravated many respondents
All you got to do is hold it I mean you donrsquot got to slam it Itrsquos like [correctional officers] showing their power That ainrsquot cool You wouldnrsquot do that in your house would you (Tyler)
Respondents also talked about the in-
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
not in the IMU in 2018 the prevalence of clinically significant symptoms varied from more prevalent than in the 2017 sample (eg anxiety) to less prevalent (eg somatic con-cerns and guilt) and factor scores were either lower (ie positive negative DAGS) or similar (for mania) for respondents not in the IMU in 2018 Despite having an excep-tionally large sample size for a study of a solitary confinement population our study was not powered to establish statistically significant dif-ferences between the 2017 and 2018 data sets
DISCUSSION In this study we combined qualitative
interview data with structured quantitative measures of psychological and psychiatric outcomes in solitary confinement among 106 randomly sampled incarcerated people in Washington State documenting both a wide range and high prevalence of symptoms of psychological distress We highlight 4 major implications of this
First while the overall BPRS ratings we analyzed indicated limited psychological distress as documented in earlier studies1112
a closer examination of specific items and factors revealed that as many as half of re-spondents had at least 1 clinically significant symptom within the BPRS anxietyndashdepression factor Because other studies using the BPRS in solitary confinement settings employed earlier 18-item versions of the scale15 used the scale in combination with other scales11 or analyzed only total ratings12 our findings are not directly comparable with those in other BPRS studies However our findings are consistent with other studies including findings that 20 or more of Washington incarcerated people in solitary exhibited a ldquomarked or severe degree of distressrdquo15(p774) and that more than half of California incarcerated people in soli-tary reported ldquosymptoms of psychological distressrdquo28(p133) Our findings therefore high-light the importance of analyzing specific components of BPRS scores and not only aggregates which mask variation in both prevalence and severity of specific symptoms
Second administrative data confirmed that our participants had relatively high rates of documented mental health problems including rates of SMI and self-harming behavior (Table 1) SMI rates typically
estimated at 10 to 15 of prison pop-ulations829 are measured at 9 in Wash-ingtonrsquos general prison population but 20 in our IMU sample Likewise our qualitative data confirmed that people in solitary con-finement experience symptoms specific to those conditions not captured in standard psychiatric assessment instruments30 Both findings suggest an affirmative answer to the question of whether solitary confinement is associated with more and worse psycho-pathology than general population confine-ment As longitudinal case studies have illustrated930 disproportionate representa-tion of incarcerated people with psychopa-thology in solitary confinement reflects the interaction of clinical and security factors in prison custody decisions solitary confine-ment responds to behavior expressing psy-chopathology often undiagnosed and also aggravates the propensity of some incarcer-ated people to break down or act out31 For these reasons the causal role of solitary confinement is not established by aggre-gate comparisons of IMU and non-IMU populations
Third the comparisons we were able to make across multiple sources of data allowed us to identify a broader range of symptoms of distress than studies that have focused on only 1 or 2 sources of data such as administrative data8 psychiatric assessments11 or qualitative interviews2830 Symptoms such as anxiety and depression were especially prevalent in this population along with symptoms os-tensibly specific to solitary confinement such as sensory hypersensitivity and a perceived loss of identity (as found in other studies exploring solitary-specific symptoms7915283032)
Finally consistent with previous studies1112
we found that the prevalence of psychiatric distress did not significantly increase over time for incarcerated people that either stay or are released from the IMU 1 year later Yet our qualitative data suggest that the BPRS may not be capturing actual psychopathology as re-spondents pointed to psychiatric distressmdashin profoundly existential terms as in the pre-viously mentioned quotations regarding selfhood and identitymdashbeyond the 2-week time period evaluated by the BPRS and outside the scope of the instrument More-over although symptoms were not cumula-tively found to worsen they did persist at high rates for incarcerated people in and out of the
IMU in 1-year follow-up assessments These latter findings are also consistent with other studies underscoring the need for additional research comparing incarcerated peoplersquos ex-periences across different contexts and over time17152832
Limitations Five specific limitations are especially
notable First although our initial sample was relatively large for a solitary confinement population our 1-year follow-up group especially the number of respondents remaining in solitary confinement in the second year was relatively small limiting our ability to establish statistically significant findings about change over time and across contexts from BPRS data Second as our interview results revealed the BPRS does not capture the full spectrum of psychiatric distress incarcerated people experience in solitary confinement Third assessments of psycho-logical well-being would ideally occur at multiple times beyond the 2 we were able to conduct within the constraints of this mul-timethod study Fourth Washington State is not representative of most state prison systems in terms of the prevalence of people with mental illnesses in solitary confinement as WADOC has undertaken reforms in both treatment of mental illness and imposition of solitary confinement over the past 20 years including reforms designed to divert people with serious mental illness to specialized treatment units33 Moreover these reforms have radically improved systematic mental health record-keeping we would expect not only a lower prevalence of psychiatric symp-toms and less deterioration in WADOC in IMUs but also a higher rate of documentation of those symptoms that are present Finally although people in solitary confinement may exhibit distinctive or disproportionately severe psychopathology causal inference regarding the relationship between solitary confinement and psychopathology is beyond the analysis we are able to perform here
Conclusions and Implications We found a wide range and high preva-
lence of symptoms of psychiatric distress in this population including BPRS symptoms associated with anxiety and depression among
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AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
as many as half of our participants adminis-trative indicators of SMI among at least one fifth of our participants and condition-specific symptoms such as feelings of extreme social isolation in well more than half of our participants Moreover these symptoms persisted in the second year for participants in and out of solitary confinement
If we study people in solitary confinement solely with instruments validated with non-incarcerated populations such as the BPRS we may fail to capture the extent of incare-cerated peoplersquos psychological distress A re-spondentrsquos rating on a given symptom may not be ldquohigh enoughrdquo symptoms may not be experienced within the instrumentrsquos desig-nated time frame or the discursive strategies incarcerated people use to articulate their suffering might not correspond with clinical language Moreover past research reveals that incarcerated people develop coping mecha-nisms for solitary1232 and these along with the fact that speaking openly about psycho-logical distress conflicts with institutional norms of self-protection in prison1230 likely contribute to a systematic underreporting of distress These are critical limitations of standardized assessments of incarcerated people whose symptoms may fluctuate sub-stantially in presence and severity during time in solitary1732 Apart from symptoms or their severity this fluctuation itself is an integral aspect of incarcerated peoplersquos psychological distress34 but a need for repeated measure-ment makes it especially difficult to capture
Our findings still point to the importance of using standardized instruments which provide a baseline for assessing and inter-preting the psychological effects of solitary confinement Nonetheless additional sources of evidencemdashinterviews clinician observa-tions staff observations medical filesmdashare crucial for capturing the range of symptoms that people in solitary exhibit and those symptomsrsquo prevalence duration and severity over time Without the benefit of mixed methods and improved instruments re-searchers and policymakers alike will con-tinue not only to lack desired data but also to not know what data we lack Increasing the transparency of both conditions of con-finement and the associated health effects is critical to both question formulation and data gathering
As 5 to 15 of the United Statesrsquo 16 million incarcerated people are held in solitary confinement for at least part of their incar-ceration56 and virtually all of those people will be released all members of society have a vested interest in limiting the induction of psychopathology suggested by findings such as those presented here At least some of the symptoms we described here including identity loss and hypersensitivity resulted directly from specific conditions of confine-ment such as the absence of mirrors and the repetitive slamming of doors To the extent that solitary is meant to make people more manageable its association with psychopa-thology calls into question its usefulness let alone its justice And to the extent that solitary confinement has any causative role in psychopathology our collective goal should be prevention
CONTRIBUTORS K Reiter served as principal investigator on this study led data collection and analysis and conceptualized and led the writing of this article J Ventura trained the study team in applying the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) consulted on data collection and analysis and participated in writing this article D Lovell consulted on study design and data collection led the analysis of administrative data and participated in writing this article D Augustine M Barragan K Chesnut P Dashtgard G Gonzalez N Pifer and J Strong participated in project design participant interviews data analysis and writing of this article K Chesnut also served as project manager and with P Dashtgard participated in administrative data and BPRS analysis T Blair consulted on data analysis and participated in writing this article
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Funding for this research was provided by the Langeloth Foundation
The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Alyssa Cisneros Emma Conner and Rosa Greenbaum contributed to study design interviewed participants and analyzed data for this project Leida Rojas Elena Amaya and Keely Blissmer helped to clean and organize data Rebecca Tublitz analyzed administrative data Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor Multiple anonymous reviewers provided detailed critical feedback that improved this piece significantly Finally the incarcerated people who shared their experiences with us made this study possible
Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
HUMAN PARTICIPANT PROTECTION This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
REFERENCES 1 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J Public Health 200595(10)1692ndash1695
2 Reiter K 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016
3 United Nations Solitary confinement should be banned in most cases UN expert says UN News Centre October 18 2011 Available at httpsnewsunorgen story201110392012-solitary-confinement-should-be-banned-most-cases-un-expert-says Accessed October 22 2019
4 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States Am J Public Health 2015105(1)18ndash26
5 Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program Yale Law School Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms Nov 2016 Available at https lawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterliman documentaimingtoreduceticpdf Accessed April 23 2019
6 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 Bureau of Justice Statistics 2015 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112 pdf Accessed April 23 2019
7 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary con-finement a systematic critique Crime Justice 201847(1) 365ndash416
8 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014104(3)442ndash447
9 Lovell D Patterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prison Crim Justice Behav 200835(8)985ndash1004
10 Morgan RD Smith P Labrecque RM et al Quantitative syntheses of the effects of administrative segregation on inmatesrsquo well-being Psychol Public Policy Law 201622(4)439ndash461
11 OrsquoKeefe ML Klebe KJ Metzner J Dvoskin J Fellner J Stucker A A longitudinal study of adminis-trative segregation J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 2013 41(1) 49ndash60
12 Walters GD Checking the math do restrictive housing and mental health need add up to psychologi-cal deterioration Crim Justice Behav 201845(9)1347ndash1362
13 Overall JE Gorham DR The brief psychiatric rating scale Psychol Rep 196210(3)799ndash812
14 Ventura J Nuechterlein KH Subotnik KL Gutkind D Gilbert EA Symptom dimensions in recent-onset schizophrenia and mania a principal components analysis of the 24-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Psychiatry Res 200097(2-3)129ndash135
15 Cloyes KG Lovell D Allen DG Rhodes LA Assessment of psychosocial impairment in super-maximum security unit sample Crim Justice Behav 200633(6)760ndash781
16 Hassan L Birmingham L Harty MA et al Prospective cohort study of mental health during imprisonment Br J Psychiatry 2011198(1)37ndash42
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S61
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
17 Senior J Birmingham L Harty MA et al Identifi-cation and management of prisoners with severe psy-chiatric illness by specialist mental health services Psychol Med 201343(7)1511ndash1520
18 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121 US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfcpus16pdf Accessed April 23 2019
19 Phipps P Gagliardi G Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and services interim report Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 Available at httpwwwwsippwagov ReportFile836Wsipp_Washingtons-Dangerous-Mentally-Ill-Offender-Law-Program-Selection-and-Services-Interim-Report_Full-Reportpdf Accessed April 23 2019
20 Neyfakh L What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate April 2015 Available at httpsslatecom news-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml Accessed April 23 2019
21 Berzofsky M Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recom-mendations US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017 Available at httpswwwbjsgov contentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf Accessed April 23 2019
22 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014
23 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism isolation and normalization in Danish prisons Punishm Soc 2017 20(1)92ndash112
24 Ventura J Lukoff D Nuechterlein KH Liberman RP Green MF Shaner A Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) expanded version (40) scales anchor points and administration manual Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 19933227ndash244
25 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples J Stud Alcohol Drugs 200970(5)751ndash761
26 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study re-tention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2016113(20)5477ndash5485
27 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
28 Haney C Mental health issues in long-term solitary and ldquosupermaxrdquo confinement Crime Delinq 200349(1) 124ndash156
29 James DJ Glaze LE Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates Washington DC Bureau of Justice Statistics 2006
30 Toch H Adams K Acting Out Maladaptation in Prisons Washington DC American Psychological Asso-ciation 2002
31 Reiter K Blair T Superlative subjects institutional futility and the limits of punishment Berkeley J Criminal Law 201823(2)162ndash193
32 Rhodes L Total Confinement Madness and Reason in a Maximum Security Prison Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004
33 Guy A Locked up and locked down segregation of inmates with mental illness 2015 Disability Rights Washington Available at httpswww disabilityrightswaorgwp-contentuploads201712 LockedUpandLockedDown_September2016pdf Accessed April 23 2019
34 Reiter K Koenig KA Extreme Punishment Compar-ative Studies in Detention Incarceration and Solitary Con-finement New York NY Palgrave MacMillan 2015
S62 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
Appendix A Additional Methods Details
Protecting Vulnerable Populations
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all
information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To recruit participants a research team member approached each
prisoner at his cell-front explained the study and invited him to interview Willing prisoners
were escorted singly to a confidential area (monitored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff)
consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research team
All identifiable data collected for this project including interview audio recordings
transcripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office or in a secure server space accessible only through multi-
factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data cleaning and linking
The University of California IRB approved this study as did the WADOC research department
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Training and Application
At the conclusion of each interview in both year one and year two interviewers
completed ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items For self-report questions interviewers asked
about the presence of symptoms in the previous two weeks per BPRS standard26 The research
team completed 16 hours of in-person structured symptom assessment training sessions with an
expert in BPRS research (co-author Ventura) prior to the year-one interviews and completed
four hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews for a total of 20 hours of
training26 Using a set of seven standardized BPRS training videos of patient interviews the
research team viewed and rated each video and discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold
Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for interrater reliability All research team
members met the minimum standard of an ICC=80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years 2017
and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment team
when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the standard
training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings
Coding Process
To develop our codebook six team members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-
line27 generating an initial list of over 500 codes These codes were further refined and
categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 10 code groups After a round of
pilot coding in which each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one re-
coding coding discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of
interest such as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months
to resolve discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were
calculated for intercoder agreement
WADOC Disclosures
The research presented here utilizes a confidential Data File from the Department of
Corrections (DOC) located within the Washington Department of Corrections The views
expressed here are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the DOC or
other Data File contributors Any errors are attributable to the author(s)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4
(1) RESEARCH PRACTICES 4
(2) PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE 5
(3) CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING 5
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING 6
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING 6
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS 7
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT 9
METHODS 10
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION 11
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION 13
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION 14
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS 18
FINDINGS 19
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE 19
Fluctuations in Populations and Lengths of Stay in IMUs 20
Racial disproportionalities 23
Behavioral Profiles Gang Affiliation and Serious Infractions 26
Existing Policy Reform Supports Further Restrictive Housing Reductions 28
IMPACTS ON STAFF 31
Appreciation for IMU Staff Culture 32
Negative Effects on Staff of IMU Work 33
Staff Desire for Policy Input 35
Staff Objections to IMU R eforms 37
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS 40
Trusting Staff to Be Responsive 40
Programs Access Challenges and Unrealized Potential 41
2
Social Contact Policies 43
Health 46
Long-Term Management Challenges in the IMU 50
Re-Entry 51
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021 55
APPENDICES 58
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL 58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020 59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE 60
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE 9 1
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE 112
3
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This report represents the culmination of a four-year-long collaboration between the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) and Keramet Reiter as Principal Investigator
based at the University of California Irvine (UCI) The Langeloth Foundation funded the
research and the Washington Department of Corrections and its Office of Research along with
Tim Thrasher Mission Housing Administrator facilitated both data sharing and collection at
every step One central research question guided our work How and with what effects has Washington DOC reduced its reliance on restrictive housing
To answer this question the UCI team collected and analyzed administrative data describing
the entire DOC population at six snapshot intervals between 2002 and 2017 315 paper surveys
of prisoners and staff in Intensive Management Units (IMUs) 186 interviews (ranging between
45 minutes and three hours in length) with a random sample of prisoners on maximum custody
status in IMUs and 77 interviews (of similar durations as the prisoner interviews) with a
strategic convenience sample of staff in IMUs
In this executive summary we highlight our major findings in five key areas (1) research
practices (2) patterns in restrictive housing use in the 2000s (3) conditions in restrictive
housing (4) staff and (5) prisoner experiences And we provide a series of brief
recommendations following closely from these findings In the full report we discuss the
research protocols findings and recommendations in more detail
(1) RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Washington DOCrsquos commitment to collecting relevant data and sharing that data with
researchers is integral to its reform agenda
bull The unprecedented scope and scale of data collected and analyzed in this project
demonstrates the feasibility of sustained researcher-practitioner collaborations working towards improved prison practices
bull Over hundreds of hours on site conducting surveys and interviews (under Mission
Housing Administrator Tim Thrasherrsquos expert coordination) our research team
efficiently accomplished our target goals for data collection and felt safe throughout
4
(2) PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull DOC has implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals (1) reducing the
number of people in restrictive housing (2) reducing the length of time individuals spend
in restrictive housing and (3) mitigating the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive
housing Over the 2010s DOC has indeed made improvements in all three areas
bull The number of people on maximum custody status in IMUs across the state has
fluctuated from a low of 149 (in 2002) to a peak of 472 (in 2011) By 2014 reforms had
cut this peak population nearly in half to 283 But the population increased again by
more than 20 percent over the next three years rising back to 342 in 2017
bull While IMU populations have fluctuated mean lengths of stay in IMUs (for those at all
custody statuses) have decreased steadily since 2011 maximum custody prisoners now
spend an average of 214 days in IMUs 133 days less than in 2011
bull Although mean lengths of stay in the IMU fell significantly after 2011 an increasing proportion of people experience IMU confinement across snapshots and cumulative
time spent in the IMU increased steadily between 2002 and 2017
bull Both Hispanic prisoners and Hispanic-affiliated gang members are increasingly over-represented in the max custody-IMU population relative to their representation in the
general prison population over the 2002-2017 period
(3) CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull The IMUs function with less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than they did two decades ago as described by staff and seen in comparison with data
Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago
bull Access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of programming has increased
bull People are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons and receive regular
individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement
bull Those prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods represent
substantial management challenges (eg histories of repeated attacks on staff or of
serious mental illness) Washington DOC officials are national leaders in piloting
alternatives
5
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Staff participated eagerly and thoughtfully in interviews and repeatedly expressed
gratitude for the opportunity to both have a voice in policy evaluations and reflect on the intensity of their work in the IMU
bull IMU Staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their
colleagues and with immediate supervisors nearly 90 percent of correctional officers
surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unitrdquo for instance
bull Although staff felt safe working in the IMU they overwhelmingly felt hypervigilant (often even unsafe) outside of prison suggesting that their work in the IMU had health
and social consequences outside of the IMU
bull Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them from
ldquoheadquartersrdquo they desired more opportunities for input into policymaking
especially around safety and security needs and risks
bull Staff described specific objections to reforms (1) prioritization of prisoner well-being
over staff well-being (2) violation of mandates to be fair and consistent through
individualized accommodations and treatment plans for prisoners and (3) imposition of
extra burdens on staff (especially around additional movement of prisoners into more
programs) causing stress about fulfilling obligations and anxieties about safety
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food and care and
perceived staff as responsive to requests kites and grievances
bull Prisoners consistently expressed frustration with the long waitlists for classes and
programs waitlists which extended the durations of their IMU placements
bull Prisoners appreciated the good-faith efforts being made around programming in the
IMU but found many of the programs to be repetitive futile and not tailored to their
specific challenges and needs
bull Prisoners found social contact policies (who could visit) and practical barriers (phone
access and geographic distance) in the IMU frustrating and harmful to their well-being
6
bull Prisoners in the IMU frequently experienced clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety and guilt serious mental illness and self-harming behavior IMU-
induced symptoms of social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity
skin irritations and weight fluctuations un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
and musculoskeletal pain
bull Prisoners in the IMU were often just trying to make it through but upon release back
into the general prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and
physical challenges experienced while in the IMU
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Maintain long-standing commitment to systematically collecting robust data about
DOC policy and practice and collaboratively sharing and analyzing this data with
external independent researchers
PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull Continue to carefully track all forms of restrictive housing use including number of
people confined rates of confinement average and cumulative lengths of stay and
the over-representation of Hispanic prisoners
bull Continue work to reduce overall restrictive housing populations but also the
frequency with which people experience these conditions lengths of stay in these
conditions and disparate impact of these conditions on Hispanic prisoners
bull The racial disproportionality in IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories and suggests an
area ripe for further policy attention
CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Continue work to mitigate the harms of restrictive housing including provision of
counseling healthcare group activities and programs and individualized
assessments of placement decisions
7
STAFF EXPERIENCES
bull Seek out and integrate IMU staff perspectives into reform initiatives
bull Provide regular opportunities for staff to reflect on the challenges of work in the
IMU (with supervisors counselors and researchers)
bull Develop resources to address the unique stress of being hypervigilant outside of the
IMU
PRISONER EXPERIENCES
bull Shorten wait times to participate in IMU programs
bull Leverage existing programming infrastructure (personnel classrooms) to develop
more substantively useful content for IMU prisoners
bull Continue to develop and support social contact for IMU prisoners
bull Address and mitigate the ongoing physical and mental harms associated with IMU
placements especially by reducing barriers to accessing healthcare and improving
the quality of treatment
COMMITMENT TO REFORM
bull Maintain the Mission Housing Administrator position which is focused on
implementing restrictive housing reform
bull Consider implementing similar ldquomission housingrdquo positions at the institutional level
to facilitate ongoing individualized attention to address the intersection of health
and behavioral challenges among the highest security prisoners in the most
restrictive conditions of confinement
bull Develop state-level agreements to permit transfer of seriously mentally ill prisoners
from custody-oriented facilities to healthcare-oriented facilities
8
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT
The project at the broadest level sought to understand Washington Statersquos widely touted
reduction in solitary confinement use at both the level of quantitative administrative data and
at the level of lived experience for prisoners and staff The core claim in 2013 Washington had
reduced their solitary confinement population by more than half and implemented additional
reforms to shorten terms in segregation refocus on rehabilitation reframe responses to self-
harming prisoners and systematically intervene in prison-based violence through programs like
Operation Place Safety1 We started this project with two key questions
(1) What policies has Washington State implemented to reduce its reliance on restrictive
housing
(2) What are the impacts ndash on both prisoners and staff ndash of Washington statersquos restrictive
housing reduction program
To answer these questions we
bull Analyzed 15 years of administrative data six record sets of the entire DOC population
on evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and 2017)
including subject-level demographic records (N=57130) event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments
(12 million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million)
bull Administered paper surveys to prisoners on maximum custody status living in and staff
working in IMUs totaling 225 paper surveys collected from prisoners and 90 from
custody and non-custody staff
bull Conducted in-depth qualitative interviews (1) 106 interviews with a random sample of
maximum custody prisoners housed across all five of DOCrsquos IMUs in the summer of
2017 (2) 80 one-year follow-up interviews with 2017 participants still incarcerated in
the summer of 2018 (3) 77 interviews with a strategic convenience sample of custody
and non-custody staff working in and supervising IMUs in the summer of 2017
1 See Bernie Warner Dan Pacholke and Carly Kujath Operation Place Safety First Year in Review Jun 1 2014 (Washington State Department of Corrections) available online at httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
9
bull Collected DOC policies and reports about restrictive housing reform in the 2000s
conducted dozens of informal conversations with former DOC leadership to identify
policy changes and goals and observed multiple classification committee meetings
during visits to Washington state to administer surveys and conduct interviews
During both our survey administration and qualitative interview data collection phases we
worked with the Mission Housing Administrator to bring 8-9 research staff on site over multiple
days at each IMU in the state in 2017 and then at each prison housing year-one research
participants in 2018 At each institution staff worked with each other and the Mission Housing
Administrator to figure out how to move prisoners into secure interview rooms on and off
IMUs The cooperation was phenomenal and across hundreds of hours of interviews our
research staff uniformly felt comfortable and safe This project unprecedented in
While this report reviews in great detail preliminary scope and scale relied on findings from analyses of both interviews and Washington State DOCrsquos administrative data a broader implication of this partnership commitment to
extended partnership deserves acknowledging at the transparency and vision for reform
outset What Washington leadership at headquarters
and in the Research Department facilitated with this project is unprecedented in scope and
scale in prison research in the United States In facilitating this work Washington DOC has first
extended and amplified its reputation as a sought-after partner in research-practitioner
collaborations building on the collaborations between DOC and the University of Washington
in the late 1990s and early 2000s around mental health and solitary confinement And
Washington DOC has second proven that research like this is eminently possible The critical
insights here would not have been possible to discern without the bigger picture investments in
transparency and improvement to which Washington DOC is committed While prisoners staff
and administrative data itself point the way to possible policy recommendations to improve the
operation of Washington prisons these insights are all-the-more-important for other prison
systems which provide less room for analytic insights but offer more room for improvement
METHODS
This study sought to systematically evaluate Washington DOCrsquos use of long-term isolation over
time through rigorous application of mixed methods Comprehensive research studies about
restrictive housing use over more than a few years in any given state are rare and analyses
incorporating qualitative interviews with prisoners and staff are rarer still Only a few studies
exist of specific ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities one of these conducted in the Washington DOC was
10
completed more than 10 years ago2 A few additional studies have sought to analyze statistics
about durations of confinement racial impacts of isolation violence in isolation and recidivism
rates post-release from isolation in several different states3 This study then breaks new
ground for researchers and policymakers alike For this reason we share here a detailed
description of our methods in hopes that this research will serve as a model for both future
studies and ongoing researcher-practitioner collaborations
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION
At the center of our quantitative data analysis is a longitudinal administrative record set of the
entire DOC population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011
2014 and 2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12
million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) The scale and scope of
this data permitted our research team to independently develop measures of critical
independent variables like criminal history as well as of key dependent variables of interest
like rates of restrictive housing use Specifically this data set included the entire prison
conviction history for all 57000 prisoners in subject population permitting our research team
to independently identify the most serious current offense and to provide a consistent measure
of prisonersrsquo criminal histories in our analyses And this data set included not just prisoners in
some form of restrictive housing but the entire prison
population on each given snapshot date allowing us to
independently define and operationalize restrictive
housing use
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying
uniform coding procedures to compile event-level data
Quantitative Data bull 15 years 6 snapshot
intervals 2002-2017 bull 57130 subject-level records bull 24 million inter-facility
movements
2 Lorna Rhodes Total Confinement Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004) Sharon Shalev Supermax Controlling risk through solitary confinement (Portland OR Willan Publishing 2009) Keramet Reiter 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016)
3 See eg CS Briggs JL Sundt and TC Castellano ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 (2003) 1341-1376 David Lovell Kristin Cloyes David G Allen amp Lorna A Rhodes ldquoWho Lives in Supermaximum Custody A Washington State Studyrdquo Federal Probation Vol 642 (Dec 2000) 33-38 Daniel P Mears amp William D Bales ldquoSupermax Incarceration and Recidivismrdquo Criminology Vol 474 (2009) 1131-65 Keramet Reiter ldquoParole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007rdquo Punishment amp Society Vol 145 530-63 (Dec 2012)
11
into a subject-level dataset We computed the housing location and custody status of every
prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at each location and
subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as infractions
Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and plausible counts
and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all prisoners in six
snapshot cohorts We also used inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-tests) to test for
differences across cohorts and groups
We measured restrictive housing use by examining the intersection of custody status and
location identifying all prisoners assigned to maximum custody status (the highest level of
custody classification in DOC) all prisoners housed in Intensive Management Units (the most
secure housing units in DOC) and focusing in particular on individuals at the intersection of
this status and location Appendix A includes a matrix detailing more specifically how we
operationalized and measured restrictive housing use in DOC In a meeting with Research
Department Staff on December 7 2020 we confirmed this operationalization was consistent
with how DOC research staff are measuring restrictive housing use in DOC currently
Our operationalization of restrictive housing potentially undercounts one category of individual
in restrictive housing those who are neither assigned a maximum custody status nor housed in
an IMU but are nonetheless in some form of segregation (likely administrative or disciplinary)
Our analysis of prisonersrsquo confinement status used movement records to distinguish periods in
IMU from time spent either in other specialized facilities or in the general prison population
(ldquogeneral populationrdquo) but excluded within facility movements from one bed or cell to another
(likely 50 million in number for our subjects) A prisoner placed in segregation prior to transfer
to an IMU or assignment of maximum custody status would not be captured in our counts
Since 2015 the Research Department has had a flag in OMNI for ldquoad seg statusrdquo which allows
them to better capture this population that we do not observe this flag was not present in the
data obtained from DOC and no such flag exists for the pre-2015 data we analyze
In order to better account for the variation in both restrictive housing capacity and
characteristics over the entire fifteen years of our data set we worked closely with Kevin
Walker and Tim Thrasher to identify both (1) IMU capacity and (2) restrictive housing capacity
within non-IMU facilities over the entire 15-year-period of our study Appendix B includes a
table with our estimates of these capacities
We also systematically collected and categorized restrictive-housing oriented policy reforms
and reports between 2011 and 2017 peak periods of reform and focus of this study
12
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
Survey Data bull 225 prisoner surveys
(response rate 62) bull 90 staff surveys
(response rate na)
Prisoner surveys included 36 numbered questions Each contained a combination of yesno
ordinal bubble options and short answer sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to
explain or elaborate on their answers Topics included experiences in IMUs conditions of
confinement health and well-being and demographic background many questions were
drawn from existing studies on prisons and prisoner
experiences4 In all there were 89 substantive items on the
survey (excluding demographic questions) coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU)
ordinal (eg daily weekly monthly describing frequency of
interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) variables
Staff surveys included 70 numbered questions Most questions were yesno or multiple choice
but there were also some open-ended probing questions Topics included corrections
employment history job responsibilities experience working in the IMU beliefs regarding
restrictive housing attitudes towards coworkers and supervisors opinions regarding restrictive
housing reforms feelings of safety health and well-being and demographic information Many
questions were drawn from existing studies with correctional staff5
Between February and April 2017 PI Reiter and Project Manager Chesnut conducted two
separate trips to collect survey data from prisoners and staff across all five of the IMUs in DOC
Surveys were piloted at MCC in February 2017 to allow for slight revisions of any confusing text
in the instrument Surveys were distributed to prisoners and staff in IMUs at the remaining four
facilities (CBCC SCCC WCC and WSP) at the end of March and beginning of April 2017 At each
site Reiter and Chesnut first spoke individually to each maximum custody status IMU prisoner
at cell-front accompanied by Mission Housing Administrator Thrasher We explained survey
participation was optional and that all data would be anonymized and answered any questions
about the research project For security reasons only paper-and-pen surveys were offered to
4 For studies from which relevant questions were drawn see Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates (Santa Monica CA The Rand Corporation 1982 Report No N-1635-NIJ) Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014) Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J ldquoTheoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation and normalization in Danish prisonsrdquo Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
5 See eg J Sundt ldquoThe Effect of Administrative Segregation on Prison Order and Organizational Culturerdquo in Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and Future Directions NCJ 250323 (Washington DC US Department of Justice National Institute of Justice 2016)
13
the maximum custody prisoner population surveys were distributed first thing in the morning
and collected a few hours later by Reiter and Chesnut We also provided stamped self-
addressed envelopes upon request for those participants who wanted additional time In total
we distributed surveys to all 363 prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU in spring of
2017 prisoners returned 225 surveys for a response rate of 62
Following survey distribution to the prisoners we held an informal question-and-answer
session with custody staff on the unit to introduce ourselves and the research project Staff
like prisoners were informed that the survey was optional anonymized and only aggregated
results would be shared with DOC We then distributed paper surveys to custody and non-
custody staff working in each IMU We encouraged staff to return the surveys to us before we
left each facility but we also provided staff with self-addressed stamped envelopes upon
request For staff we also shared digital copies of the survey through e-mail following each site
visit We also made a special effort to seek out non-custody staff working in the IMU such as
medical staff mental health workers classification counselors and program facilitators In
order to be as inclusive as possible we repeated this process again in the afternoon following
shift change and left copies of the surveys with self-addressed stamped envelopes for the
graveyard shift In all staff returned 90 surveys Calculating a response rate for this strategic
convenience sample is not possible because we sought to reach staff across all three shifts
included non-custody staff like nurses and educators who sometimes work across units and
distributed surveys in person and via e-mail
The surveys served a dual purpose in the research project First they provided a baseline
understanding of the challenges of living and working in Washington IMUs as well as of the
attitudes towards recent reforms which was critical to the research team as we developed
interview instruments and conducted interviews Second they gave the research team an
opportunity to introduce the research project to prisoners and staff laying the groundwork for
interview participation in subsequent months
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
The qualitative prisoner interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured
questions Questions included a combination of yesno options and probing open-ended
follow-ups Topics included conditions of daily life (prior to and during isolation) perceived
state of physical and mental health access to medical treatment and experiences with
required programming in the IMU Where possible included questions replicated those asked
in existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences Fourteen of the questions making up
the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) a standardized scale used to identify indicators of
serious mental illness were embedded within the interview instrument In total 40 of the
14
substantive items on the interview instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 14
embedded questions designed to establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg How much does it cost Interview Instruments to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have bull Questions about conditions you noticed any changes in your health since you health programming reforms have been in this IMU) variables Such questions demographics always included open-ended follow-up questions bull Embedded Brief Psychiatric (eg Can you describe those changes) We first used Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment the interview instrument at the smallest IMU in for prisoners Washington interviewing 15 prisoners We then
revised both the wording and ordering of questions for maximum clarity and engagement in the
remaining 91 interviews we conducted across the four other IMUs in the state
The condensed year-two instrument contained approximately 70 questions The questions
largely replicated the year-one questions ndash but excluded the questions about background
demographic and experiences over time in prison and adjusted some other questions to
address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status As part of both initial and
follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psychological assessment both
during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following (for the 10 observational
items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech) interviews For the 14 self-
report questions embedded in the interview guide interviewers asked about the presence of
symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard Importantly this means that BPRS scores
certainly undercount symptoms experienced intermittently or outside of that two-week time
window
The qualitative staff interview instrument consisted of 87 numbered semi-structured questions
As with the prisoner interview instrument these questions included a combination of yesno
questions and probing open-ended follow-up questions Topics included IMU policies job
responsibilities personal safety health relationships with coworkers and supervisors
restrictive housing reforms and demographic information
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and to develop the interview
instruments Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol
for administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment
training sessions in year one with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Ventura and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Using a set of seven standardized
BPRS training videos of patient interviews the research team viewed and rated each video and
15
discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for
interrater reliability Dr Ventura conducted an interrater reliability analysis and confirmed that
trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years
2017 and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment
team when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the
standard training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings In addition to
ensure appropriate administration of the BPRS in a prison setting Dr Ventura accompanied the
research team on the first leg of the first visit to MCC in year one Dr Ventura co-conducted
interviews with several team members and was available to clarify questions throughout the
length of the trip In sum this extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members
over the two years (9 women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral
students (9) with expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement
settings identified and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being
studied and minimized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application
of questions and assessments
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that
all information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To identify potential participants the Mission Housing Administrator
provided a list of all prisoners on maximum custody status at a given IMU a day or two prior to
the research teamrsquos visit to that IMU Chesnut then randomized that list of prisoners in order
to identify a list and order of potential research participants (with the target goal of
interviewing roughly one-third of maximum custody status prisoners in each IMU) To recruit
participants a research team member approached potential participants at cell-front
explained the study and noted whether the prisoner would be interested in participating
Willing prisoners were escorted one-by-one to a confidential area (monitored visually but not
aurally by DOC staff) consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research
team In all 106 prisoners participated in interviews 39 percent of the prisoners approached
for participation refused comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people6 Interviews
ranged in length from 45 minutes to 3 hours
6 D Lovell ldquoPatterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prisonrdquo Criminal Justice amp Behavior Vol 358 985ndash1004 (2008) M Berzofsky amp S Zimmer National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recommendations
16
Immediately following year-one interviews interviewers asked participants whether they
consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to participating in one-year
follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all but two (n = 104)
consented in writing to medical file reviews At Interviews Completed the conclusion of each prisoner interview in both bull Random sample of prisoners year year one and year two interviewers completed one 106 ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items Following bull Follow-up prisoner interviews interviews interviewers reviewed consenting year two 80 participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of bull Strategic convenience sample of diagnoses prescriptions and substance abuse staff year one 77 status DOC additionally provided electronic
administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as
comparable population-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
In year two the UCI research team attempted to re-interview all of the year-one participants
who were still incarcerated within Washington DOC In total we conducted 80 re-interviews
Only 4 participants refused re-interviews 1 died and 21 were unavailable because of
institutional transfers or being on parole This drop-out rate is low compared to similar studies7
In year two 28 participants were in the IMU and 52 were back in the general prison
population These year-two follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and two hours
During the research teamrsquos return visits to each IMU in the state in year two the team made
presentations to IMU staff about the research findings from year one including the results of
the year-one staff interviews Unlike prisoners staff were not randomly selected for interviews
during year one Rather a strategic convenience sample of custody and non-custody staff was
identified Efforts were made to interview custody staff from all three shifts non-custody staff
(medical and programming) and supervisory staff at all five facilities Staff at each facility were
informed ahead of time about scheduled interview trips and encouraged by DOC administrative
leadership to participate if they felt comfortable Once on site at each facility UCI team
(US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018) httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf
7 JH Kleschinsky LB Bosworth SE Nelson EK Walsh HJ Shaffer ldquoPersistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samplesrdquo J Stud Alcohol Drugs Vol 705751ndash761 (2009) B Western A Braga D Hureau C Sirois ldquoStudy retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach populationrdquo Proc Natl Acad Sci USA Vol 11320 5477ndash5485 (2016)
17
members directly approached staff (usually in the afternoon or on the second day of interviews
on site after the work of identifying and moving prisoners into interview rooms was underway)
to identify willing interview participants Staff were informed participation was voluntary and
would not involve incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them
adversely and that all information shared would be protected and anonymized In all 77 staff
from across all five IMUs and headquarters participated in interviews Staff included
correctional officers supervisors mental and medical health practitioners program and
educational instructors and institutional and headquarters leadership Since staff were
strategically sampled and many staff interviewed worked both in the IMU and in other units
within the prison a refusal rate cannot readily be calculated for the staff interviews Staff
interviews lasted between 30 minutes and 3 hours
All interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed
translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details
(names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti for analysis (as discussed further below) All
identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings transcripts
BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a locked
filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible only
through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data
cleaning and linking The University of California IRB approved this study as did the Washington
DOC research department
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS
To develop a codebook for analyzing these hundreds of hours of interview data six team
members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-line inductively exploring how participants
understood restrictive housing generating an initial list of over 500 codes8 These codes were
further refined and categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 9 thematic
code groups IMU Relations Use of Force Safety Health IMU Culture IMU Policy IMU
Conditions Enduring the IMU and Prison Work Issues After a round of pilot coding in which
each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one recoding coding
discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of interest such
as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months to resolve
8 K Charmaz Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis (Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006) Y Chun Tie M Birks K Francis ldquoGrounded theory research A design framework for novice researchersrdquo SAGE open medicine 7 1-8 (2019)
18
discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were calculated
for intercoder agreement
BPRS data were imported into SPSS and Stata to generate descriptive statistics including the
comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS items and factors among three groups of
prisoner interview participants year-one participants year-two participants housed in the IMU
and year-two participants housed in the general population Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos
test were performed to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing
location time raceethnicity and gang status
FINDINGS
We collected a large amount of robustly detailed data for this project and are still in the process
of analyzing and synthesizing across the administrative data surveys and interview transcripts
To date the UCI research team has published three peer-reviewed articles based on this
research two drawing primarily on the prisoner
interviews in leading public health journals the Initial Publications American Journal of Public Health and PLOS One 1 Reiter et al American Journal of
Public Health (2020) and one drawing primarily on DOC administrative 2 Strong et al PLOS One (2020) data in a leading criminology journal Justice 3 Lovell et al Justice Quarterly (2020) Quarterly All three articles are included as
appendices to this report In addition to
summarizing findings from those articles here we include as-yet unpublished findings from our
analyses of administrative data and our surveys and interviews with prisoners and staff We
present three categories of findings (1) patterns and conditions in restrictive housing use (2)
impacts on staff and (3) impacts on prisoners
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
Over the 2010s DOC implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals we focus on
analyzing here First DOC sought to reduce the number of people in restrictive housing
Second DOC sought to reduce the length of time individuals spend in restrictive housing Third
DOC sought to mitigate the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive housing Our analysis
indeed finds improvements in each of these three areas of focus though we also identify
fluctuations in the degree of improvement barriers and challenges to implementing these
improvements and additional areas that might deserve to be the focus of additional reforms
We focus in this section primarily on our analysis of administrative data the six cohorts of
snapshot data at three-year-intervals between 2002 and 2017 along with restrictive-housing
oriented policy reforms and reports we collected as part of our analysis We concentrate
19
particularly on maximum custody status in the IMU the central focus of our study However
where relevant we also present findings on other population in the IMU As we detail in our
2020 Justice Quarterly article (Appendix C) where we published some of the initial findings
presented here a range of custody statuses and housing locations are highly relevant to
understanding overall restrictive housing use For instance those on maximum custody status
outside of an IMU and those not on maximum custody status in an IMU both experience
restrictive housing conditions and also reflect the range of behavioral challenges and security
threats DOC is managing at any given time
FLUCTUATIONS IN POPULATIONS AND LENGTHS OF STAY IN IMUS
Overall the maximum custody population in IMUs in Washington state was lower in 2017 (342
prisoners) than at its peak in 2011 (472 prisoners) However over the entire period of our
quantitative data analysis there were many fluctuations in this population from a low of 149
prisoners in 2002 to another dip to 283 prisoners in 2014 Figure 1 presents the number of
prisoners in IMUs by custody status from 2002 to 2017 These numbers suggest that the widely
touted reductions in the DOC maximum custody IMU population which inspired this study
were not sustained over the course of the study Those in IMU who were not on maximum
custody statusmdashlargely those held on administrative or disciplinary segregationmdashsaw similar
variation in population over time peaking in 2008 and falling somewhat in subsequent years
Figure 1 Prisoners in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
800
700
s r 600
en 177
osi 500 337
r 260
Pf 291
o 400
r e 300
mb 144
Nu 472
200 105 338 342
283 100 228
149
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
As a proportion of the total prison population those held in IMUs peaked in 2008 when 39
percent of the prison population was housed in an IMU That proportion was substantially
20
similar in 2011 before dropping slightly in 2014 and 2017 Figure 2 presents the percentage of
the total prison population held in IMU by custody status
Figure 2 Percentage of Total Prison Population in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
3 27
20
09
14
16
09
19
10
17141
2
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n 19
07
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
Ave
rage
Day
s in
IMU
Reductions in the average length of stay (LOS) for prisoners on maximum custody status in the
IMU were more sustained than the 2014 population reductions Figure 3 presents the average
number of days in the IMU by custody status For those on maximum custody status in the IMU
on the 2017 snapshot date the average LOS in the IMU was 214 days lower than even in 2002
(average LOS 227 days) and a dramatic decrease from the 2011 peak average LOS of nearly
348 days This represents a reduction in average lengths of IMU stays of more than four months
ndash an impressive policy intervention Similarly the average LOS in IMU for those held in IMUs but
not on maximum custody status on the snapshot date (likely those on administrative or
disciplinary segregation) saw a sustained decrease across the study period from an average of
114 days in 2002 to 71 days in 2017
Figure 3 Average Length of Stay in IMU (Days) by Custody Status and Confinement Location 2002-2017
348 326
214
128117115 91
7166
306 284
227
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
21
These reductions in the average IMU LOS however is only one measure of how much time
prisoners are spending in IMUs Another measure of time-in-the-IMU is cumulative over a
prisonerrsquos entire sentence how much time Figure 4 Average Cumulative Days Spent in IMU by All Prisoners 2002-2017 will he spend in an IMU setting9 Across the
entire Washington prison population 90 cumulative time spent in an IMU has 80 increased steadily from an average of 43
Cum
ulat
ive
Day
s in
IMU
in IMU declined in recent years for the maximum custody population a greater share of the
incarcerated population experienced placement in an IMU
This analysis suggests two critical areas of focus Figure 5 Percentage of All Prisoners Spending at Least One Day in an IMU 2002-2017 IMU reform First reductions in IMU
populations and lengths of stay must be 3433tracked over time to analyze whether they are
sustained Second rates of IMU use represent
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n
another critical measure in assessing IMU
reform in addition to populations and lengths
of stay In our 2020 Justice Quarterly article we
hypothesize that IMU capacity is closely tied to
IMU use noting that IMU populations increase
with increasing bed capacity and decrease with
decreasing bed capacity this hypothesis
requires further analysis and deserves further
policy attention
24 25 28
30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
days in 2002 to almost double that at 82
days on average in 2017 (see Figure 4)
Indeed a greater proportion of people in
DOC experienced IMU confinement over
time In 2002 24 of the prison population
had spent at least one day in an IMU By
2017 over one-third (34) of the prison
population had spent time in an IMU (Figure
5) In short while the average length of stay
9 For each snapshot year cumulative length of stay in IMU is measured from the beginning of each prisonerrsquos current sentence up until the snapshot date
22
In sum the 2014 reductions in maximum custody IMU populations in Washington have not been sustained Average lengths of stay in IMU for the maximum custody population have steadily decreased since 2011 but more prisoners in Washington DOC experience IMU
confinement each year Decreasing IMU capacity and reducing lengths of stay are both key to
sustaining decreases in IMU populations
RACIAL DISPROPORTIONALITIES
While Washington DOC had some successes in reducing IMU use especially in reducing average
lengths of stay the racially disproportionate impact of the IMU has increased dramatically since
2002 The racial disproportion of the IMU actually peaked in 2014 when the IMU population
had recently declined Figure 6 presents the racialethnic makeup of the IMU maximum custody
and general prison populations In 2014 37 percent of
maximum custody IMU prisoners were Hispanic as
compared to only 12 percent of the general prison
population As the maximum custody IMU population
increased this racial disproportionality decreased
slightly in 2017 27 percent of maximum custody IMU
prisoners were Hispanic as compared to only 13 percent of the general prison population
Figure 7 presents the racialethnic disproportionality of the IMU maximum custody population
relative to the general prison population Hispanic gang members were similarly over-
represented in the maximum custody IMU population in these years (see Figure 8)
This racial disproportionality in maximum custody IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories (especially infraction rates)
and suggests an area ripe for further policy attention We look forward to conducting further
analyses of the administrative data to better understand how these various predictors of
maximum custody status IMU classifications interact over time
Between 2005 and 2017 Hispanic prisoners were 2-3 times as likely to be in the IMU as in the general prison population
23
Figure 4 Racial and Ethnic Make-Up IMU Maximum Custody and General Prison Population 2002-2017
White Non-Hispanic LatinoHispanic
70 70
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population General Population IMU-Max IMU-Max
Black Non-Hispanic Other Non-Hispanic
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
30 30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max General Population IMU-Max
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
0
10
20
24
-
Figure 5 RacialEthnic Disproportionality in the IMU Maximum Custody Population 2002-2017 D
ispro
port
iona
lity
Ratio
35
30
25
20
15
10
05
00 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
White Non-Hispanic Black Non-Hispanic OtherUnknown Hispanic
How to read this chart
Disproportionality ratios (DR) greater than one reflect disproportionate representation in the IMU Maximum Custody population relative to the general population
DR equal to one reflects equal representation in IMU Maximum Custody and general population groups
DR lower than one reflects an under representation of the racialethnic group
25
BEHAVIORAL PROFILES GANG AFFILIATION AND SERIOUS INFRACTIONS
While our analysis demonstrates that racial disproportionality steadily increased among maximum custody IMU prisoners over the study period especially relative to the general prison population overall behavioral profiles among both general population and maximum custody IMU prisoners fluctuated over the study period
First in the general population the overall proportion of prisoners identified as gang affiliated increased only slightly over the study period from 19 percent to 24 percent of all prisoners While the overall proportion of gang-affiliated prisoners in the IMU was about 3 times higher this proportion also increased only slightly over the study period from 60 percent to 67 percent of all maximum custody IMU prisoners In the general population white- and black-affiliated gang members remained relatively stable over the study period (4-5 percent of the population and 9-10 percent of the population respectively) In the maximum-custody IMU population white- and black-affiliated gang membership fluctuated somewhat across the snapshot years while Hispanic-affiliated gang membership increased substantially from 21 percent in 2002 to 32 percent in 2017 Relative to their share of general population Hispanic-affiliated gang members were consistently over-represented in the maximum-custody IMU population making up nearly 40 percent of the population in both 2008 and 2014 Figure 8 displays this fluctuating over-representation of Hispanic-affiliated gang members while Figure 9 displays the racial breakdown of gang-affiliates in the maximum custody IMU population
Figure 6 Affiliation with HispanicLatino Gangs in IMU
Maximum Custody and General Populations
Between 2002 and 2017 Hispanic-affiliated gang membership in the general prison population doubled from 4 percent to 8 percent and in the maximum custody IMU population doubled from 21 percent to a peak of 40 percent in 2014
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max
26
Figure 7 Gang Affiliation in the IMU Maximum Custody Population by Type of Gang
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Hispanic-Affiliated Black-Affiliated White-Affiliated Other Gang
Second in the general population overall annual infraction rates decreased slightly over the study period (from an average of 13 infractions per year in 2002 to an average of 11 in 2017) Figure 10 displays average annual overall infraction rates as well as counts of violent assaults and staff assaults for the maximum custody IMU and general prison populations Average numbers of violent infraction and staff assaults remained low and stable at an average of 05 violent infractions per year and 01 staff assaults per
Annual infraction rates and counts year in the general population Between 2005 and of both violent and staff
2017 infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU infractions were fairly stable over population were fairly stable However overall time in both the general prison infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU population and the maximum population were about 5-6 times higher than in the custody IMU population from 2005 general prison population Following a peak of 83 in 2002 the mean annual infraction rate for the maximum custody IMU population fluctuated between 4 and 5 infractions per year while the average number of violent infractions hovered around 3 and the average number of staff assaults hovered just under one The relative stability of serious misconduct in both the general and the maximum custody IMU populations (as compared to the instability of the IMU population over this period) raise questions about whether and how infractions are related to maximum custody IMU placements ndash questions we look forward to addressing in future analyses
27
Figure 8 In-Prison Violations IMU Maximum Cu stody and General Population 2002-2017
IMU Maximum Custody General Population
9 9
8 8
s n 7 7
oitca 6 6
rfnI f 5 5
o e ta 4 4
Rtn 3 3
uC
o
2 2
1 1
0 0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Annual Infraction Rate Annual Infraction Rate Violent Infractions (Count) Violent Infractions (Count) Staff Assaults (Count) Staff Assaults (Count)
EXISTING POLICY REFORM SUPPORTS FURTHER RESTRICTIVE HOUSING REDUCTIONS
Over the 2010s Washington DOC enacted an impressively wide range of reforms in order to achieve the reductions in IMU populations and lengths of stay described above These reforms also sought to mitigate the harshness of the conditions in IMUs or restrictive housing Table 1 below provides our summary of the reforms we learned about in conversations with DOC leadership staff and prisoners as well as through searches of policy documents archived on the DOC website These reforms included (a) institutionally-oriented reforms like altering conditions of confinement especially through providing new programming opportunities for prisoners in the IMU (b) organizational restructuring designed to facilitate delivering these new programs and (c) individually-focused reforms to support behavioral modification better mental health care and alternatives to IMU placements Dan Pacholke who was the Secretary of Corrections during the early planning stages of this project co-authored a 2015 report More
28
Than Emptying Beds which describes many of these reforms in more detail centralize decision-making implement programming in segregation and support staff10
Our interviews with prisoners and staff confirmed that these reforms were making a difference day-to-day in terms of the overall operation and individual experience of living and working in the IMUs Specifically staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
Table 1 Categories and Types of Washington DOC Restrictive Housing Reform as identified in 2017
Conditions of Confinement
Organizational Restructuring
Behavior Modification
Mental Health Preventative
Congregate Programming
Creation of a Mission Housing Administrator
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (in-cell)
Elimination of self-harm infractions
Alternative sanctions
Level System Mission-Based Housing Units
amp Teams
Individual Behavior Management
Program (IBMP)
Disruptive Hygiene Protocol
Alternative Specialized
Housing Units (TRU WRU)
Increased Elective access to
programming (GED
Redemption
Facility Risk Management
Teams
Chemical dependency class
counselors MH staff
(attending to
Operation Place Safety (2013-14)
Book Club) prisoner-staff ratios)
Nature Immersion
(Blue) Room
Indeterminate sentencing
TransitionStep-down Unit
From staff we consistently heard that there was less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than in the early 2000s Staff described how prior to recent reforms in the IMUs cell extractions were common ldquoIt was completely rocking and rollingrdquo was a phrase we heard repeatedly But by 2017 cell extractions and other violent prisoner-staff encounters were rare One staff member we interviewed mourned the change acknowledging ldquoI really enjoyed cell extractionsrdquo but he also said he knew the culture change represented an improvement in everyonersquos well-being ldquoIs it actually good for everyone to do that stuff you know what I mean No The answer is nordquo This acceptance of non-violent de-escalation as the
10 Dan Pacholke amp Sandy Mullins More Than Emptying Beds A Systems Approach to Segregation Reform (Washington DC Bureau of Justice Assistance 2015) No NCJ249858 httpsbjaojpgovsitesgfilesxyckuh186filespublicationsMorethanEmptyingBedspdf
29
status quo was especially noticeable in comparison with data Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago Prisoners also agreed that cell extractions were rare as one noted ldquoWere not doing a lot of cell-extractions here I havent seen a cell-extraction since Ive been here So compared to the California system and the Federal system ndash I was teamed [extracted
from my cell] just to give me fluidsrdquo Our pre-interview Staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
surveys confirmed these qualitative descriptions a majority of staff (just over 60 percent of respondents) reported they ldquodid not feel unsaferdquo working in the IMU and even more prisoners (75 percent of respondents) reported that they had never felt unsafe in the IMU
From prisoners we consistently heard that they had access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of other programs Although prisoners frequently expressed concerns about the quality and frequency of healthcare they received they also consistently reported that they were able to access at least some care filing and receiving responses to medical kites seeing medical staff regularly and getting adequate care for major illnesses and terminal diseases like cancer For instance in our pre-interview surveys more than 50 percent of prisoners reported seeing medical staff daily One prisonerrsquos comments were representative ldquoI do trust the mental health staff yes I just believe that they should do morerdquo But another said he appreciated the level of care in his current IMU ldquoI would say that this one addresses certain mental health issues better than others you know Theyrsquore more quick to deal with the mental health here with more one-on-onerdquo
Overall in our interviews with prisoners and staff as well as in our observations of custody classification committee meetings we saw that those prisoners remaining on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods
bull Prisoners are in the IMU for had well-documented histories of severe
specific identifiable reasons behavioral issues We interviewed prisoners who
bull Prisoners receive regular had repeatedly attacked staff prisoners who had individualized assessments regarding repeatedly harmed themselves through actions their continued IMU placement like head banging and swallowing sharp objects bull Treatment and custody staff work and prisoners who had been in the IMU so long together to develop targeted they did not want to return to the general prison interventions with the goal of population In observations in IMUs and at transitioning even the most headquarters we witnessed compassionate behaviorally challenging and risky custody and treatment staff grappling with how to individuals out of the IMU design individualized plans to address and overcome these behavioral challenges ndash from weekly check-ins with headquarters leadership to the provision of tailored incentives for exercise equipment and art supplies In particular the
30
Mission Housing Administrator is familiar with every individual in the IMU regularly assessing and documenting justifications for their placem ent institutionalizing such individual-level knowledge and attention is critical to maintenance of existing progress and continued reform
In sum prisoners are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons prisoners receive regular individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement by a classification committee and treatment and custody staff work together to develop targeted interventions with the goal of transi tioning e ven the most behavioral ly chall enging and risk y i ndividuals out of the IMU This is in stark contrast to other systems like California where hundreds of prisoners have spent years in restrictive housing with little or no evidence of unresolved or severe behavioral issues justifying their continued maintenance in highly restrictive conditions
Still administrative data suggests that Washington DOC rsquos 2014 IMU population reductions have not been sustained that an increasing proportion of people in DOC experience IMU
confinement over the study period and that Washington DOC is a leader among state this confinement has a racially correctional systems in restrictive housing disproportionate impact Moreover as we reform administrative leaders have built a detail below prisoners and staff raised a solid foundation for continued reforms ndash number of concerns with both IMU conditions including IMU population reductions and reforms decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions Nonetheless Washington DOC has laid a solid
foundation for continued reforms ndash including IMU population reductions decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions ndash with the policy changes they have implemented over the last five years especially Both individual- and institution-level reforms have enabled the successes DOC has achieved to date Indeed these reforms demonstrate that Washington is a leader among state correctional systems in seeking to understand how prisoners end up in restrictive housing for extended periods designing programs to change IMU -stay trajectories and implementing alternati ve pathways that shift patterns of restrictive housing placements across institutions
IMPACTS ON STAFF
In this section we focus on our analysis of (1) the 90 surveys we collected from staff working in IMUs and (2) the 77 interviews we conducted with sta ff working in or supervising Among the 90 staff completing sur veys 74 per cent were mal e 66 pe rcent were married 84 perce nt were white and their average age was 44 Among the 77 staff completing interviews 74 percent were male 57 percent were marrie d 84 percent were white and their average age was 42
31
Because we do not have overall demographics of staff in W ashington DOC we cannot compare the demographics of our interview participants to the overall demographics of DOC staff
We highl ight four the mes from our surveys of and interviews with staff Each theme suggests areas where DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU staff as well as areas where DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to staff well- being positive aspects of IMU staff culture negative effects of working in the IMU on staff staff desire for input into IMU policies and procedures and specific staff objections to IMU reforms
APPRECIATION FOR IMU STAFF CULTURE
IMU staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their colleagues and with immediate supervisors ndash both in the ir sur vey response s and duri ng i nterviews Nearly 90 percent of correctional officers surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unit rdquo for instance On average staff described being satisfied with their
IMU staff largely like their jobs trust jobs 75 percent said they were mostly or very
their colleagues and immediate satisfied and 64 percent said they would take the supervisors and feel safe at work same job again Likewise 75 percent reported that This satisfaction and professionalism their immediate supervisors frequently asked for can and should be leveraged in their opinions about problems (describing t he implementing IMU reforms frequency as either ldquosometimesrdquo or ldquoalwaysrdquo) And two-thirds of staff (67 percent) reported feeling safe working in the IMU
In our informal conversations and formal interviews with staff we repeatedly observed and heard staff expressing trust and appreciation for their colleagues in the IMU In some cases our presence required additional staffing on the units and many ldquoregularrdquo IMU staff noted how working with staff unfamiliar with IMU routines and relationships was disruptive in contrast to their usual trusting relationship with their ldquoregularrdquo IMU colleagues One staff member rsquos comment succinctly represents the perspectives of correctional officers who appreciate working in the highly controlled IMU environment with trusted partners
I think IMU is one of the safest places to work in the whole prison system I mean theyre locked down 23 out of 24 hours a day youre escorting them with another person theyre in restraints Yeah things can happen Sure the y can make weapons Sure they can do ndash but they can do that out there more easily To me you know what you have in an IMU and you got some ndash at least you got a partner there with you under the circumstances
32
In sum IMU staff largely like their jobs tr ust their colleagues and immediate supervisors and feel safe at work This solid foundation of satisfaction and professionalism is a significant asset to DOC leadership work ing with line staff to communicate about and implement IMU reforms
NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON STA FF OF IMU W ORK
Although staff described feeling safe in the IMU satisfaction with the work and loyalty and trust in their colleagues they also described negative effects of working in the IMU environment especially ongoing negative mental and physical health consequences Among the 90 staff completing surveys the average staff member reported their overall health was good (a rating of 3 out of 5) A significant minority of staff (one quarter) however reported their overall health was poor or fair (a rating of 1 or 2 out of 5) While their self-assessments of their overall health varied staff consistently reported high levels of stress the average staff member reported their overall stress level as moderate (a rating of 2 out of 3) and one -third of all respondents reported the ir overall stress levels as high (a rating of 3 out of 3) Staff consistently reported that these high stress levels affected their overall health 80 percent of staff reported that stress had affected their health either ldquosomerdquo or ldquoa lotrdquo (a rating of 2 or 3 out of 3) in the past year Overall staff thought DOC failed to address correctional officersrsquo physical and mental health concerns they consistently disagreed with positive statements like ldquo DOC provides adequate services to me et correctional officersrsquo physical health needs rdquo Additional investments in supporting staff well-being could be both well received and impactful
Comments on the surveys and our subsequent interviews with staff in IMUs provided context for these overall reports about high stress levels in the IMU First staff perceived having greater ndash and more unreasonable ndash obligations during a workday in the IMU than elsewhere in the prison For example one correctional officer wrote ldquoIMU staff do twice as many duties as regular staff They never get compensated for all the extra wor k and stressrdquo This sentiment of imbalanced workload across units was echoed by another custody staff respondent ldquoStaff are
consistently overworked in the IMUs They are IMU staff identified key stressors required to do a job that requires twice the work of 1 Being overworked by additional a correctional officer working e lsewhere Staff deal
responsibilities with a lot of stress but are still reprimanded for 2 Being institutionally undervalued calling in sickrdquo
and under-supported 3 Needing to be hypervigilant at Second while staff often reported trusting
work and at home collaborative relationships with their immediate supervisors they perceived institutional leadership
as unsympathetic and indifferent to the unique stressors of working (and feeling overworked) in the IMU Specifically correctional officers criticized DOC in general for not providing support
33
for staff and thereby undermining safety in the IMU As one officer said (and m any others echoed) ldquoThis place does not care about staff All they care about is making things look good and keeping the offenders happy at all costs This results in COs sa ying screw it and not caring anymore which makes things unsaferdquo
Third while staff largely reported feeling safe at work in the IMU they also reported being hypervigilant on the job and also at home off the job Correctional officers reported that they were aware of the pervasiveness of risk in their work ldquoWe all have to understand that when we take a job like this anything can happen at any time That is the risk that we all take This job is not for everybodyrdquo Nearly all (98) survey respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they ldquoalways have to keep it in mind that t rouble could happen any timerdquo while at work Moreover respondentsrsquo levels of stress and perceptions of risk were strongly correlated those respondents who reported they worked in ldquodangerous jobsrdquo and were always dealing with ldquosome sort of crisisrdquo were also more likely to report higher stress levels
Importantly staff seemed to struggle with leaving these anxieties hypervigilant states of mind and stressors at work Staff consistently described being on edge and worried about their safety outside of work As one staff member said
I definitely notice like going to hellip fairs and that kind of stuff in the summer with the family hellip Irsquom definitely looking around a lot more Even going to like banks I look around a lot more I constantly ndash my headrsquos constantly on a swivel and Irsquo m in a place I donrsquo t really know Irsquo m definitely looking ndash grocery store Irsquo m constantly looked down ndash standing in the checkout line because there rsquos a million people standing there and yoursquo re constantl y look ing around lik e oh y eah that guyrsquos done time that guy has done time Like it rsquos - you can ndash itrsquos really weird when definitely get a sense for that kind of stuff And definitely keep an eye out
Another described how this habit of ldquolooking aroundrdquo and ldquokeeping an eye outrdquo was both a source of stress and a necessity for safety ldquoMy wife gives me a hard time about it all the time Shes like lsquoDo you ever turn the dirt bag meter off rsquo hellip And it may drive her nuts but i t keeps my family saferdquo One of the most common manifestations of this hypervigilance staff described Messaging about steps WADOC
is taking to value and support was being sure to sit in corners and face out looking at staff is critical some of these doors ldquoIn a restaurant I canrsquo t sit with my back to a steps should involve addressing group of peoplerdquo And another said ldquoI wonrsquo t let people pervasive hypervigilance and its
get behind me rdquo A growing body of literature about effects on stress correctional officer health suggests this pervasive
34
hypervigilance among correctional officers has long-term traumatic effects our data suggests that working in the IMU may exacerbate these effects 11
In sum our surveys of and interviews with staff revealed specific stress ors associated with work in the IMU the pressure of additional responsibilities and feeling overworked a sense of being institutionally undervalued and under -supported and percepti ons of high risk leading to persistent hypervigilance even outside of work These specific sources of stress in turn suggest areas where DOC could intervene to mitigate stress For instance messaging about steps DOC is taking to value and support staff and about DOC awareness of the additional work pressures some reforms entail could mitigate stress improve the culture of IMUs and even facilitate acceptance of future reforms For instance to the extent reforms actually reduce risk o r violence in the IMU communicating this clearly to staff could mitigate some of the hypervigilance that makes their work and home lives stressful
STAFF DESIRE FOR P OLICY INPUT
Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them fr om ldquoheadquartersrdquo In our survey of staff most staff across all facilities (63 percent) said that they ldquooften find it difficult to agree with this Departmentrsquo s policies on important issuesrdquo Likewise in our interviews with correctional officers and serge ants (45 of our 77 staff interviews) the majority (80 percent) reported that they experienced tension and conflict around IMU policies Indeed while three -quarters of staff reported that their immediate supervisors frequently asked for their opinions two-thirds reported that higher level administrators either ldquoneverrdquo or ldquorarelyrdquo asked for the ir opini ons
However when we asked staff to elaborate on what was wrong with IMU policies and reforms they almost always focused on the process by which reforms we re introduced rathe r than on the substance of the policy They described simply being told that a policy had changed without either being asked whether they agreed with the change or understanding why the policy had changed Specifically correctional officers and sergeants complained that administrative decision-makers above them were out of touch with the r eality of cur rent operations ldquoThey just make the decision hellip but we really donrsquo t have any say or influence how those kinds of decision are made They rsquore made by administrators that havenrsquo t been unit staff
11 See Lois James amp Natalie Todak ldquoPrison employment and post-traumatic stress disorder Risk and protective factorsrdquo American Journal of Industrial Medicine Vol 619 (2018) 725-32
35
in a long long time That donrsquo t remember or they forgot where they came fromrdquo Staff interpreted their lack of opportunities for input as some combination of leadership being lazy and uncaring ldquoLik e lsquowhy are they having us do this Donrsquo t they understand that this is a bad idea you knowrsquo You know the option is either they do understand itrsquo s a bad idea and they dont care or they donrsquo t know and theyrsquo re you know canrsquo t be bothered to askrdquo
On the other hand when unit managers or other leadership staff solicited the opinions of line staff about policy implementation the staff tended to be more accepting and less critical of the policy For instance in one facility a staff member described a policy change to allow porters on third shift in restrictive housing and how the sergeant and correctional unit supervisor (CUS) consulted the correctional officers about how to implement the policy ldquoSo what they did is the sergeant and the CUS came and ta lked to the staff and said lsquoWho would you guys recommend They have to be IMS program They have to be level four And they have to infraction-freersquo Fine So we all picked as a group hellip He was super polite model inmaterdquo While the correctional staff we re not involved in the formal policy decision to install porters on third shift administrators made room for correctional officersrsquo input and involvement by allowing them to choose who that person would be By involving correctional officers in that proce ss they increased staff support for and buy-in to the policy change
Indeed our research team heard repeatedly from staff that simply having the opportunity to talk with us about their work express their opinions and reflect on their experiences was a comfort and a relief ldquolike a weight off their shouldersrdquo Staff told us this individually duri ng interviews and communicated this during our de-briefs with unit leadership at the end Staff wanted more input into policy ndashto have
of each site visit in the summer of 201 7 The a chance to air their opinions and to have
eager and thoughtful participation by staff in input into mechanisms of policy
our interviews provides yet another implementation on the ground
indication of their interest in and wi llingness to engage in conversations about policy reform In fact bringing in outside researchers to systematically seek input from staff (as DOC frequently d oes) whether in the form of surveys or interviews might be one way to increase both staff perce ptions that they have a voice in policy processes and their willingness to implement new policies
In sum survey responses interview analyses and informal conversations all suggest that the manner in which reform and policy changes are presented to sta ff matters the more the policy is explained and the more staff input is solicited in the reform process especially as to the details and mechanisms of policy implementation the more likely staff will be to support and facilitate reform implementation
36
STAFF OBJECTIONS TO I MU R EFORMS
While staff most frequently complained about the manner in which reforms were introduced and especially about their lack of input in policy implementation they also described specific objections to reforms ndash largely in terms of the impact these reforms had on their day -to-day work and their percepti ons of whether or not staff safety and well- being were being pr ioritized
First staff perceived many reforms as prioritizing prisoner well-being over staff well-being IMU staff described IMU prisoners as the ldquoworst of the worstrdquo ndash the least deserving of the undeserving And they repeatedly described any new or additional benefits to prisoners ndash whether additional commissary items more time out of cell or more programming opportunities ndash as being risky and harmful to staff In some cases staff perceived the reforms or benefits to prisoners as pushing staff into new job roles for w hich they lacked both time and training For instance one correctional officer said ldquoI mean usually we come here and we have to do our job which is you know the yard showers and all that and you know guys say they program and we donrsquo t have time to figure out what theyrsquo re programming I mean thatrsquo s not our job description rdquo And another correctional officer described feeling as if he was expected to ldquodo more with lessrdquo ldquoYou know the other big thing with the removal of staff is the addition of programs you know So it seems like the classic managerial approach of do more with less and thatrsquos you know never well received by the people that have to do the more with lessrdquo In other words staff tended to see rehabilitative -oriented reforms as both a burden and oppositional to their fundamental job role ndash to maintain safety and security
Second staff perceived reforms addressing individual prisonersrsquo special needs like ext reme mental illness as inconsistent In fact staff repeatedly described individualized treatment as dangerous ndash encouraging prisoners to exploit and manipulate the rules to their own benefit For instance one correctional officer described his objecti ons to a protocol for responding to instances of feces-smear ing in the IMU ldquoIt is a
Staff characterized reforms as inconsistent manipulation point and they figured that out risky and dangerous Avoiding publicly
Hey on a Tuesday and Thursday we donrsquo t contradicting staff and communicating have yard and showers Well I want to take a more systematically about the benefits of shower so Irsquom going to smear feces on t he reform for staff could minimize resistance wall so I can go get my shower Thatrsquo s how that works And we have to do i trdquo Other correctional officers objected to provision of things like a nerf ball for throwing or soap for carving ndash both individualized attempts to address specific behavioral problems ndash as opening the door for other prisoners to make new demands both adding to officersrsquo daily list of obligations and making security harder to maintain
37
Third staff described how reforms prioritizing prisonersrsquo needs undermined their ability to safely manage a difficult population For instance one correctional officer described his frustration with trying to enforce the rules and being undermined or chastised by supervisors who were prioritizing prisoner well- being
Lots of the time we rsquore more nervous about getting in trouble for refusing guys If you ask them (about) yard and shower and they donrsquo t answer and you ask them multiple times and raising your voice to hopefully get their reaction then turn around and you refuse them and then all of a sudden they rsquore bitching and moaning about it and then all of a sudden now theyrsquo re getting it Itrsquo s just one of those things where it gets discouraging but it rsquos ndash I can only do my job
Another correctional officer described frustration with reforms seeking to limit the imposition of infractions and sanctions within the IMU ldquoNow you try to correct an inmate rsquos actions ndash Irsquo ve seen a lot of my infractions get thrown out not even processed hellip to where wersquo re not holding the people responsible And that becomes a safety risk for us Because the inmates donrsquo t show that same respectrdquo In sum correctional officers emphasize consistency as a tool for both maintaining their own authority and minimizing manipulation by prisoners
Staff did not simply describe how and why they objected to IMU reforms They also described how they resisted these reforms undermining policy implementation by ldquo burningrdquo prisoners on out-of-cell time breaking rules adhering to the letter rather than the spirit of a policy and encouraging grievances against leadership Often correctional officers justifi ed non-compliance or undermining policies as the only way to compensate for a lack of resources such as staff shortages and time limitations during a shift When describing this kind of undermining of policies interviewees contextualized these strategie s as coping strategies necessary to mitigate resource issues staff explained that additional programming and movement required more time and careful planning over the course of a shift For example one correctional officer described how he purposefully tried to reduce movement during his shift by asking about yards and showers as early as possible He elaborated about this tactic
It often results in the pri soner fi ling a gr ievance with the i nstitution Howeve r custody staff are aware of this and encourage these kinds of grievances as they provide evidence for their argument that administration are making unrealistic demands on them with the introduction of new policies and programs in restrictive housing units
Not all IMU correctional officers were so resistant to reform however For instance another officer (a sergeant) described IMU policies as changing frequently but characterized adapting to those changes as part of his job ldquoI adapt pretty well with the change You have to around
38
here Itrsquo s changing every day Whether itrsquo s a good change or not yoursquo re going to have your personal opinion and I sometimes donrsquo t agree but again Irsquo m a person who adapts to changerdquo This same office r in fact articulately described the importance of orienting re spectfully rather than punitive ly to prisoners in the IMU
I just always treat them as I would want to be treated or how I was raised which is with communication and just being respectful Irsquoll try to give you an example Like somebody will say lsquo That guyrsquos not going to get out of his cellrsquo Irsquo m going to say lsquo Whyrsquo Hersquo s going to say lsquo Because he was arguing with me and he rsquos a threat nowrsquo I go lsquoWell why not work wi th the guy and talk to him to tr y to come up with a better resolution rsquo Rather than just no movement and pi ss him off some more because no movementrsquo s not going to teach him any different than he rsquos already doing I mean if yoursquo re swearing and cussing at me you got your arms out and your fists going at me thatrsquo s not going to h elp you by having no movement Talking it outrsquos going to help you more So Irsquo m more of a ndash I guess Irsquom a littl e more libe ral on that part
While some staff we interviewed described this kind of ldquorespectfulrdquo or ldquoliberalrdquo approach as ldquodrinking the K ool-Aidrdquo of reform arguments coming from headquarters plenty of others asserted at least acceptance of if not also support for the ldquorespectfulrdquo approach As David Lovell noted comparing interviews he conducted in the early 2000s to those he conducted as part of our team in 2017 ldquoA hell of a lot has changed I did not hear the same stories about neglect and abuserdquo 12
In sum understanding the specific objections staff raised to existing reforms is critical to minimizing resistance and encouraging successful implementation of future reforms Indeed the specific objections staff raised to reforms suggest important areas where communication between line staff and supervisors could be clarified and improved
bull The perceived contradiction between rehabilitation and saf ety could be acknowledged and addressed in communicating with staff about reforms
bull The possibilities for simultaneously improving both prisoner and staff well- being through reform could be emphasized
12 Conversation with David Lovell Feb 24 2021 notes on file with author
39
bull Supervisors and non-custody staff advocating for indiv idualized interventions need to (1) address line staff concerns with inconsistency in treatment and policy and (2) strategize to avoid undermining line staffrsquo s authority in day-to-day interactions
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS
In this section we focus on our analysis of the interviews we conducted with a random sample of 106 maximum custody status IMU prisoners in the summer of 2017 and re -interviews conducted with 80 of these participants still incarcerated in the summer of 20 18 Where relevant we also include some findings from the 225 surveys we collected from prisoners in IMUs in the spring of 2017 Our random sample of 106 prisoner interview participants had a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU and mean of 5 prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Forty -two percent of our participants were white 12 percent were African American 23 percent were Latino 23 percent were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differences between our participants and all people held in IMU s at the time of our interviews People in the general prison population at the time of our interviews however were notably different than those held in IMU as they are older less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang -affiliated and less likely to be Latino
In this section we highlight six themes from our interviews with prisoners Each suggests areas where Washington DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU prisoners as well as areas wher e DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to prisoner well-being trust access to programs social contact policies health (both physical and mental) long-term management challenges and reentry
TRUSTING STA FF TO B E RESPONSIVE
A central theme of our interviews was that prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food care and safety Prisoners consistently expressed confidence that things like kites grievances and mail would be handled and delivered in good faith They understood processes for communicating needs and concerns and expected to receive timely (if not always
satisfactory) responses to their requests and Prisoners in WADOC frequently complaints Indeed when we asked prisoners if they described experiences of basic
trusted staff from correctional officers to healthcare procedural justice they understood providers they said things like ldquoI got a lot of respect for the rules trusted processes and themrdquo and ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo and ldquothey are just doing their mostly respected staff jobrdquo While prisoners did not describe staff as friends or
advocates neither did they describe them as enemies or opponents This is surprising In many prison settings in which our team has conducted research we have witnessed and documented
40
more adversarial relationships between prisoners and staff with less trust that policies and procedures will be followed devoid of respect expressed in simple phrases like ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo
To be clear prisoners frequently complained about the answers they received to kites the quality of medical care they received and the way some staff treated them But their complaints tended to focus on procedures and policies rather than on individual instances of mistreatment This suggests a baseline of trust in process The idea that rules are transparently knowable and fairl y appl ied is often called procedural justice people who experience procedural justice are more likely to pe rceive rules and institutions as legitimate and therefore to follow those rules and comply with institutional policies13 The baseline of trust ndash and associated perception of procedural justice ndash we documented among IMU prisoners reflects an existing infrastructure and institutional culture that can facilitate further reform like sharing new information and gaining buy -in for new policies and procedures
PROGRAMS ACCESS CHALLENGES AND UNREALIZED POTENTIAL
In our visits to IMUs across Washington over two years and in our conversations with prisoners and staff we learned about a dizzying arr ay of programs available to prisoners in the IMU A2A ACT chemical dependency reading groups and in-cell course work Although prisoners were often eager to participate in these programs both in order to make their IMU time productive and in order to fulfill the requirements for release from the IMU they were frustrated with long program waitlists Prisoners described wait times of six months or more in order to get into programs or courses they were required to take before leaving the IMU They under stood that a variety of factors contributed to these long wait times including time to be transferred to the
designated programming IMU limited Prisoners experienced waiting for I MU- number of seats available for each program based programs as extra punishment and program duration WADOC could communicate more clearly with prisoners about how programming For many participants waiting to get into waitlists are organized and how waiting programs was the most frustrating aspect of affects IMU stays and good time their housing in IMU because they
experienced the wait times as an extra punishment ndash one they feared would extend their overall time in prison ndash actually making the day-to-day conditions of their confinement harder to bear First prisoners worried that they were either losing good time while waiting for programming or receiving additional
13 Tom R Tyler ldquoProcedural Justice Legitimacy and the Effective Rule of Lawrdquo Crime amp J ustice Vol 30 283-357 (2003)
41
punishments by being ldquopushed bac krdquo onto longer wait lists As time spent in the IMU can impact prisonersrsquo early release dates long progr am wai t times wer e pe rceived as an e xtra punishment essentially adding to a prison sentence This is a place where DOC could build on the foundation of trust and procedural justice described in the prior section to simply communicate more clearly with prisoners about how waitlists are constructed and whether and how they are impacting good time and release dates
Second prisoners described the time waiting for programs as not just frustrating because it amounted to more time spe nt in the IMU and sometimes eve n more time in prison but also ldquotaxing mentallyrdquo They described waiting in the IMU as ldquodead time rdquo leaving one prisoner feeling like a ldquodog in a cage rdquo and another feeling ldquoanger all the timerdquo Yet another prisoner described doing the same set of packets three different times while waiting for a spot in face -to-face class like A2A
Once prisoners were able to enroll in programs they often found the content disappointing in specific ways too r epetitious (ldquothe same content over and over againrdquo) not compatible with daily life in the IMU and structured to prior itize a pragmatic attitude over a learning mindset One prisoner described this pragmatic mindset ldquoIf they put them in the Hole ndash they rsquore going to do their Hole time they rsquore going to their little program
WADOC has built an but theyrsquore going to do what they want to do Theyrsquore impressive infrastructure to already set in their ways and nothing rsquos really going to support IMU programming but change themrdquo And another explained ldquoThey force it the content of those programs
upon you which automatically makes an individual want could be improved to be more to rebel rdquo Prisoners also noted the tensions between relevant to IMU prisoners what programs teach and the challenges participants face in the general prison population For many the e mphasis on be havioral change clashed with a prison environment that hindered application of pro-social skills and strategies As one prisoner said ldquo But letrsquos be honest this isnrsquo t ndash it didnt help you didnrsquo t change you nonerdquo Another explained that people often made -up scenarios for role-playing interactions just to complete the program rather than actually engaging with real-life experiences and events
In addition to these general critiques of IMU programs as (1) prioritizing just getting through in order to get out of the IMU and (2) not acknowledging the everyday challenges of prison life prisoners described more specific shortcoming of curricula In some cases prisoners said they had to complete too much of the curriculum alone in their cells ldquoItrsquos meant to be a program where itrsquos supposed to be done with other people where you can sit in a group and talk And they have us do it in our cells So that right there itself I mean how does that work rdquo In other cases prisoners described the programs as loosely adapted from programs designed for juveniles in fact a number of participants had experienced the same curriculum while
42
incarcerated as juveni les Prisoners repeatedly expressed a hope that the curriculum could be more tailored to the adult setting Prisoners also noted that program materials were not always translated for non-English speakers or useful for prisoners who were illiterate In these instances programming was counterproductive to the goals of reform
While participants were critical of the programming they expressed this criticism in the context of wanting to use their IMU time productively being eager for classes and learning opportunities and appreciating the good- faith efforts of DOC in providing programming opportunities Indeed DOC is in a particularly positive position having developed the infrastructure for programming in the IMU the personnel to staff this space and even the interest among prisoners to take advantage of programming Figuring out how to get more meaningful content into this existing infrastructure should be relatively easy compared to the immense work that has already been done to build the infrastructure for and interest in programming among both prisoners and staff
SOCIAL CONTACT POLICIES
In the restrictive c onditions of the IMU one set of policies was both especially troubling to prisoners and especially likely to jeopardize their well-being during and after their IMU placements policy r estrictions on whom they could be in contact with while in the IMU and practical barriers to making contact with even those people on their permitted contact lists
Specifically prisoner s frequently told us that while in the IMU they were only permitted to receive visits from immediate family members parents siblings legal spouses and chi ldren Prisoners understood DOCrsquo s definition of family as excluding unwed partners children prisoners are participating in raisin g who were not legally or biologically their own close friends and other individuals playing important roles in prisonersrsquo lives While there may be
many valid security and management reasons for Prisoners experienced barriers to limiting visitation for IMU residents the immediate -communication ndash especially restricted family-only rules in the IMU impose additional visitation possibilities and limited
layers of isolation on prisoners who have no phone access ndash as some of the
immediate family those who have a strong hardest parts of doing IMU time Both connection with extended family members (eg prisonersrsquo mental health and their re-aunts uncles cousins) and those who have entry prospects deteriorate when
family ties and social bonds fray nurtured strong bonds with friends colleagues or mentors For instance one prisoner participant
who had been in foster care described his frustration with not being able to have a visit with a critical mentor ldquoI have a mentor from the streets who works in a non-profit center for LGBTQ people Hersquo s not my immediate relative so he canrsquo t come here to visit me rdquo Even when
43
prisoners had immediate family who we re e ligible to visit geographic di stance and une xpected lockdowns thwarted visitation plans T he prisoners we interviewed repeatedly identified visitation protocols and distance as two primary factors preventing face -to-face contact with support networks during periods of isolation
Indeed practical barriers including both the location of the IMUs a nd the challenges of regularly accessing the phone in the IMU also disrupted IMU residentsrsquo abilities to maintain connections with their outside support networks While prisoners on mainline may place a phone call throughout various hours each day ndash except for during count and meals ndash telephone access in the IMU is reduced to one hour five times a week during recreational time In the IMU this recreational time varies daily and might not occur at all on certain days of the week Even when prisoners did get into the yard they complained that the phones were unreliable a line would be dead or the person on the other end of the line would not be able to hear them for instance So a prisoner wishing to speak regularly even to an immediate family member l ike a child or spouse might not be able to maintain any kind of consistent communication As one participant described
When I was in isolation last time that put tension [on my marriage] My wife and I were used to having three phone calls a day and we were al ways se nding emails back and forth and getting contact visits on a weekly basis When I got [placed in solitary confinement] little by little I noticed that there was distance growing between us hellip My marriage didnrsquo t work out after that
These rule-based and practical barriers to social contact and the resulting frayed familial and social networks have documented consequences for prisonersrsquo well-being in and out of the IMU Among the random sample of prisoners we interviewed the weaker prisonersrsquo familial attachments the more likely they were to have mental health problems Of those prisoners who reported strong familial attachments only 15 percent had a history of self-harm But of those prisoners who did not report strong familial attachments 85 percent had a history of self -harm14 Indeed our analysis suggests that maintaining social bonds is critical to surviving time in the IMU Strong social bonds both allow prisoners to embody roles as part of social webs beyond that of ldquo convictrdquo and provide material and emotional support advocacy and psychological stability A robust body of social science confirms this finding docume nting how
14 To calculate this we linked histories of self-harm from BPRS and medical records (a yesno binary variable) to interview transcripts In coding in terview transcripts we identified those participants who had described having ldquostrongrdquo family b onds and m aintaining re gular family c ommunications and w e identified those participants who described having limited or no communication with family
44
social bonds facilitate successful re-entry after prison and l ong-term criminal desistance15 In sum facilitating the maintenance of existing social bonds for prisoners in the IMU will likely mitigate the mental health impacts of the restrictive conditions and facilitate more successful re-entry into the general prison population and society
One possible way to facilitate maintenance of social bonds could be through provision of tablets i n the IMU In fact in our year -two interviews prisoners described being able to communicate with the outside world ndash especially with JPAY players they had missed in the IMU ndash as the greatest form of freedom post-IMU During our second-year interviews with prisoners no longer in the IMU several participants we re even compelled to retrieve their JPAY players to show to us The player proved critical to re -entry facilitating immediate contact with prisonersrsquo friends and family Such communication was
IMU prisoners described JPAY players especially important for those whose loved ones as critical to easing their re-entry into lived out of state or could not visit in-person And the general prison population
the JPAY technology especially facilitated Providing some access to tablets in intergenerational communication with younger the IMU could mitigate some of the family members ndash like nieces and nephews ndash who frayed social bonds prisoners are less inclined to handwrite letters or talk on the describe experiencing there phone Former IMU prisoners described writing electronic messages sharing and saving photos and engaging in video calls By providing access to the outside world JPAY players gave prisoners an opportunity to reflect on process and express their experiences to those they cared about most As one participant explained ldquo Like itrsquos easier to text than write than actually ndash lsquo cause yoursquo re able to take a moment reflect on what you want to say than when yoursquore having a conversation So itrsquo s a lot easier It also builds relationshipsrdquo JPAY players were also a source of entertainment for prisoners in (re)constructing their daily routines Being able to listen to music or play games on their devices
15 Cochran JC ldquoBreaches in the wall Imprisonment social support and recidivismrdquo Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 512 (2014) 200-229 Cochran JC and Mears DP ldquoSocial isolation and inmate behavior A conceptual framework for theorizing prison visitation and guiding and assessing researchrdquo Journal of Criminal Justice 414 (2013) 252-261 Liu S Pickett JT and B aker T ldquoInside the black box Prison visitation the costs of offending and inmate social capitalrdquo Criminal Justice Policy Review 278 (2016) 766-790 Martinez DJ and Christian J ldquoThe familial relationships of former prisoners Examining the link between residence and informal support mechanismsrdquo Journal of Contemporary E thnography 382 (2009) 201-224 Mills A and Codd H ldquoPrisoners families and offender management Mobilizing social capitalrdquo Probation Journal 551 (2008) 9-24 Naser RL and La Vigne NG ldquoFamily support in the prisoner reentry process Expectations and realitiesrdquo Journal of Offender Rehabilitation 431 (2006) 93-106 Swanson C Lee CB Sansone FA and Tatum KM ldquoPrisonersrsquo perceptions of father-child relationships and social supportrdquo American Journal of Criminal Justice 373 (2012) 338-355 Wallace D Fahmy C Cotton L Jimmons C McKay R Stoffer S and Syed S ldquoExamining the role of familial support d uring prison and after r elease on post-incarceration mental healthrdquo International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 601 (2016) 3-20
45
helped break up the monotony as prisoners re -adjusted to general population Players also helped prisoners plan for the future whether org anizing their legal or other personal affairs
That said p risoners also described problems with JPAY players For many prisoners the costs of the players and video messaging were prohibitive (even if chea per than travel costs for in- person visits) P risoners who only took advantage of the JPAY kiosks wished for the increased communication with family and friends facilitated by an individual player JPAY expenses create inherent inequities in communication which are in turn likely to affect re -entry J PAY use is also contingent upon technological capacity For instance many participants shared stories of frustration and anxiety when they could not use their player after the prison Wi-Fi went down
In sum the communication and entertainment potentials of tablets make the devices valuable to prisoners adjusting to life outside of the IMU and might also repair social bonds otherwise frayed by IMU placements Acce ss costs and capacity however would have to be addressed in expanding the benefits of tablets to pr isoners during and post-IMU The use of JPAY players (or other tablets) during IMU placement is worth further consideration To be clear tablets are not an appropriate replacement for in- person visitation even in the IMU they simply have potential as an additional resource to further support the social contacts and bonds that mitigate the harms of restrictive housing
HEALTH
Our interviews with IMU prisoners and especially our systematic applica tion of the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale during these interviews established that time in the IMU has significant physical and mental health consequences for prisoners In two articles published in leading public health journals the American Journal of Public He alth and PLOS ONE we detail the mental and physical health consequences of IMU time we include those articles as Appendices D and E respectively and we summarize the fin dings here
First prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of psychiatr ic symptoms suicide attempts and incidents of self-harm and were more
We found high rates of serious mental health than twice as likely to have a serious problems in the IMU mental illness designation as prisoners in
bull 1 in 4 IMU prisoners had clinically significant the general prison population Our initi al symptoms of depression and anxiety sample of 106 participants had a mean bull 1 in 2 IMU prisoners had clinically significant BPRS rating of 37 and a median rati ng of psychiatric distress 33 (out of a possible range from 24 to bull IMU prisoners were 2x as likely as GP 168) suggesting mild psychiatric prisoners to have an SMI designation symptoms among the study population
46
at the time of our interviews Analysis of individual BPRS items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms Further analysis of BPRS factors (measuring 3-4 symptoms commonly associated with one another) as opposed to individual items provided additional evidence of clinically significant psychiatric distress in as much as half of the population sampled as with the depression-anxiety-guilt-somatization (DAGS) factor See Table 2 below for a summary of these findings Importantly the BPRS assesses only symptoms experienced in the last two weeks so BPRS scores may well undercount psychiatric symptoms experienced intermittently over longer periods
Administrative data support the finding of long-term psychological distress Among our respondents 19 percent had serious mental illness (SMI) designations 22 percent had a documented suicide attempt and 18 percent had documentation of other self-harm all at some point during their incarceration either before or during their time in the IMU Moreover respondents with SMI designations were more likely to report positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms than non-SMI respondents (See Table 3 in the AJPH article for more details) These findings support the validity of the BPRS assessments
Qualitative interview data revealed symptoms not otherwise captured by the BPRS and medical files Two classes of symptoms were reported by a majority of respondents toll of being in the IMU (80 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 359 times) and the psychological consequences of social isolation (73 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 192 times) Two additional symptoms were as prevalent as other clinically significant BPRS items like anxiety references to sensory hypersensitivity (16 of respondents mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Given these findings in year two follow-up interviews with prisoner participants we also included PC-PTSD-5 instrument questions to assess the prevalence and severity of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Within the month preceding the interview more than 40 percent of participants (44 of 79) indicated 3 or more symptoms of PTSD the baseline score for establishing a probable PTSD diagnosis As discussed further in the re-entry section below these symptoms of PTSD were closely linked to earlier experiences in the IMU
Second prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of physical health problems associated with their confinement in the IMU In 2017 15 percent of interview participants reported having clinically significant somatic concerns (concerns ldquoover present bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80 respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 percent reported clinically significant ratings of somatic concerns Of those who reported a clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were re-interviewed in 2018 25 percent indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic
47
concerns in 2018 Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 percent reported clinically significant somatic concerns compared to just 8 percent of those housed in the general prison population While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
Table 2 BPRS Symptom and Factor Prevalence 2017 and 2018
2017 (N=106) IMU 2018 (N=28) Non IMU 2018 (N=52) - Symptoms16 Depression 2450 2500 1538
(n=26) (n=7) (n=8) Anxiety 2450 3214 2885
(n=26) (n=9) (n=15) Somatic Concern 1510 2143 769
(n=16) (n=6) (n=4) Guilt 1790 1786 769
(n=19) (n=5) (n=4) Hostility 1130 1786 1731
(n=12) (n=5) (n=9) Hallucinations 940 1429 1154
(n=10) (n=4) (n=6) Excitement 1040 1429 769
(n=11) (n=4) (n=4) Factors17
Positive 1600 1790 1350
(n=17) (n=5) (n=7) Negative 470 360 380
(n=5) (n=1) (n=2) DAGS 4910 4290 4810
(n=52) (n=12) (n=25) Mania 1700 1430 1730
(n=18) (n=4) (n=9)
16 Only clinically significant symptoms (rating of 4 or higher) that were reported by 10 or more of the sample are presented 17 Factors combine 3-4 different symptoms commonly associated with one another Positive = hallucinations unusual thought content and conceptual disorganization Negative = blunted affect emotional withdrawal and motor retardation DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization Mania = elevated mood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement
48
concerns in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 percent confidence level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test)
Data from our 225 initial surveys collected from IMU prisoners also indicated high rates of concerns with physical health among the IMU population Of the 225 survey respondents 63 percent expressed health concerns 48 percent were taking medication 17 percent had arthritis and 8 percent had experienced a fall in solitary confinement And 82 percent replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo while in the IMU
Based on these high rates of reported concerns with physical health both among survey respondents and on the BPRS assessments of interview subjects we systematically analyzed all references to physical health concerns in the prisoner interview transcripts Through this analysis we identified three pervasive physical health concerns among IMU prisoners skin irritations weight fluctuations and musculoskeletal pain
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They understood these conditions as being directly associated with poor air and water quality irritating hygiene products and a lack of sun exposure inherent to IMU conditions of confinement Likewise participants described the interrelationship between a lack of nutritious food or adequate calories in the IMU feelings of lethargy and being too overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day and rapid weight fluctuations experienced during periods spent in the IMU Participants described their weight going down with regular and social exercise routines and going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exercise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations highlight the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU Finally participants spoke frequently about one specific chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to them in the IMU
In addition to specifying these physical health concerns participants described multiple barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU First prisoner respondents worried about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response if staff ultimately deemed
We found common patterns of physical health problems in the IMU bull Skin irritations bull Weight fluctuations bull Musculoskeletal pain
Barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU bull Fear of incurring more IMU time bull Lack of privacy bull $4 co-pay
49
their health issue to be non- emergent This fear prevented them from seeking care even when they were experiencing concern ing symptoms like heart palpitations Second prisoner respondents worried about the lack of privacy available to them if they sought or needed any form of healthcare needing to hand a medical kite to a correctional officer passing by needing to speak with a nurse at ldquocell-frontrdquo in e arshot of other s or submitting to a restrained ldquoescortrdquo to a medical treatment area The lack of privacy was a particular deterrent to seeking mental health care due to stigma around mental illness in prison and fear of b eing targeted by other prisoners as a result of their seeking mental health treatment Third prisoner respondents were dissuaded from seeking care by the $4 co-pay for a non-emergency medical appointment (for non-indigent prisoners) Because of IMU polici es capping overall prisoner spending for any need (whether healthcare food or toiletries) this $4 co-pay represented a larger proportion of their available money in the IMU than in the general population and so represented an additional barrier to seeki ng care from within the IMU Physical and mental health concerns in the IMU might be mitigated and reduced by addressing some of these barriers to IMU residents seeking and accessing care
LONG-TERM MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES IN TH E IMU
While we have focused in much of this section on common and prevalent experiences across our random sample of interview subjects a small subset of the people we interviewed had different experiences in the IMU and presented different challenges to DOC For instance we interviewed IMU pri soners who had re peatedly assaul ted staff repeatedly se riously harmed themselves or repeatedly committed serious rule violations as soon as they were released from the IMU in self-described efforts at sabotage In other words these prisoners r eflect a small group of those with ongoing or severe behavioral challenges DOC officials were actively engaged with following the behavioral trajectories of these prisoners meeting with them individually and investigating options to shorten their time in IMU This is laudable
Another population that presents serious long-Washington is well-positioned to pilot term management challenges for DOC are STG -and promote new initiatives focusing identified prisoners Among the random sample of on viable placement and programming
IMU prisoners we interviewed nearly one -third alternatives for IMU prisoners with (29 percent) had been in the IMU for at least one ongoing severe behavioral challenges year Of these more than half (55 percent) were
STG members or affiliates Of these three were awaiting out- of-state transfer due to ongoing serious STG-related activity Again these are small numbers of prisoners but they represent significant management challenges absorbing DOC time and resources and driving up key restrictive housing metrics like average lengths of stay frequency of cycling in and out of the IMU and the racial disproportionality of IMU placements (see Figures 8 and 9 above)
50
To date much solitary confinement reform nationwide has ignored such difficult cases focusing instead on the more widespread over-use of solitary confinement for prisoners who have not committed serious rule violations as with prisoners serving indefinite solitary confinement terms in California prisons due to gang status labels (prior to the Ashker reforms) or prisoners who have spent extended terms in solitary confinement for non-serious or single infractions Having successfully reduced IMU populations (albeit with some fluctuations) and lengths of IMU terms Washington is well-positioned to pilot and promote new initiatives focusing on viable placement and programming alternatives for IMU prisoners with ongoing severe behavioral challenges As Washington officials know too well no single solution is likely to address the wide range of behavioral challenges among those individuals who have experienced repeated extended IMU placements
One commonality we noticed among IMU ldquolong-termersrdquo was that they often felt they had nothing (more) to lose through misbehavior whether they had histories of serious violence against themselves or others To the extent Washington officials are able to provide hope and resources to these prisoners these prisonersrsquo calculations about the desirability of violence shift For instance providing one IMU prisoner with a nerf ball to throw another with soap to carve and scheduling weekly headquarter check-ins with a third at least anecdotally reduced misbehavior and violence In future research we look forward to further analyzing both these specific cases and broader DOC efforts to address individual and group behavioral challenges
RE-ENTRY
IMU prisoners overwhelmingly looked forward to being released back into the general prison population They associated re-entering the general population with improved access to clothing food hygiene products exercise programming and medical care And transitioning back to the general population offered opportunities to feel ldquohumanrdquo again ldquoWell it allows you to have contact It allows you to be human It allows you to see what people do on a daily basis that come from the field or to work and allow me to sub-act that Allowing you to copy what is considered humanrdquo
But re-entry came with challenges and anxieties too Prisoners reported significant difficulty readjusting to regular social contact upon leaving solitary confinement Transitioning to multiple-person housing or a particularly bustling unit is challenging to navigate after having extremely limited interactions with people for months or years Something as simple as shaking hands represents a significant amount of contact for someone just released from IMU Prisoners also develop different privacy expectations while in isolation which can make re-entry feel like a ldquothousand eyes are watching yourdquo Re-adjusting to life in general population also entailed a level of choice and personal
51
responsibility not typically exercised in isolation prisoners described the challen ges of anticipating transfer to a new location figuring out the day -to-day processes of their new unit and acclimating to the work and social norms of a new group of correctional staff and fellow prisoners Transitioning back into the general population with new norms and fewer restrictions disrupted the consistent (and sometimes rigid) routines prisoners had developed to manage their time in solitary confinement
BPRS and PTSD scores confirmed ongoing Mental health symptoms experienced challenges with the mental health problems in the IMU persisted after release prisoners experienced in the IMU For along with new symptoms indicative instance in year -two interviews of PTSD Former IMU prisoners
therefore face ongoing mental health respondents not in the IMU experienced needs and challenges higher rates of clinically significant anxiety
(as scored through the BPRS) than they had in the IMU (See Table 2 above) And prisoners in our study not in the IMU in year two frequently described extreme sensitivity to any amount of noise feeling overwhelmed by the amount of movement and stimulation they experience d in the general population intrusive thoughts (like triggered memories and flashbacks) and an inability to stop experiencing symptoms of guilt and blame Each of these experiences are consistent with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) While IMU p risoners were often just trying to make it through upon release back into the ge neral prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and physical challenges first experienced in the IMU The l ack of sensor y stimulation and social interaction in the IMU seemingly promotes rumination and fixation on traumatic disturbing or distressing memories and this rumination lingers even after leaving the IMU
One prisoner respondentrsquo s description of this constellation of symptoms which make the transition from the IMU to the general prison population difficult is representa tive
When you isolate us you kind of deprive us of those sensories everyday you know Like since Irsquove been here hellip Irsquo ve noticed like loud noise makes me feel I donrsquo t like it If therersquo s too much stuff going on I find myself I get all irritated If ther ersquos a l ot of people I ge t weirded out if the rersquos too much activity going on I kind of canrsquo t be around it Itrsquo s just it paranois me I donrsquot know why Itrsquo s only happened since Irsquo ve been in here this time I think itrsquo s because Irsquo ve been isolated for as long a s I have been Things that Irsquom not used to k ind of throws me through a loop
Likewise staff described how they observed these adjustment difficulties in prisoners leaving the IMU
52
I think theyrsquore uncomfortable being out of restraints around people hellip I donrsquot think they know what to do For example I used to watch them come out of IMU and in general population housing unit theyrsquod come to me and it would be strange for them to hellip have somebody walk up and say ldquoHey man howrsquos it goingrdquo and touch them Theyrsquore not used to people touching them hellip All that noise and all those people around them and having to share a cell with somebody and have somebody so close theyrsquore not used to that Those are effects of long-term restrictive housing I think they improve but ndash I mean Irsquove watched that happen over and over again
Prisoners contemplating release from the IMU not into the general prison population but instead onto the streets experienced significant anxiety about this looming transition As one prisoner described
Most people get released to the streets get a chance to go to hellip at least get out of the hole because they donrsquot want to release people to the streets from the hole because that causes safety risks For me they donrsquot have any options hellip My DOC officer is coming to pick me up itrsquos not like I wanted it to happen but hersquoll probably put me in handcuffs until I get to the office and actually wait to release me because until Irsquom out of their custody Irsquom still a security risk18
While we know DOC sought to ensure prisoners transitioned from the IMU into general population prior to release to the streets this was not possible in every case Understanding the challenges prisoners experience upon leaving the IMU and their anxieties about release are therefore especially important to designing transition and release plans
Our analysis shows that solitary confinement produces a unique cluster of mental health symptoms ndash including but not limited to cognitive decline anxiety depression hallucinations and PTSD19 Our interviews revealed an additional layer of difficulty for prisoners reentering the
18 While we sought to interview prisoners who had paroled between our year-one and year-two interviews we were not able to make contact with any of these individuals and so cannot systematically analyze actual experiences of release-to-the streets
19 Arrigo B A amp Bullock J L (2008) The psychological effects of solitary confinements on prisoners in supermax units Reviewing what we know and recommending what should change International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 52(6) 622-640 doi 1011770306624X07309720 Grassian S (2006) Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Washington Journal of Law amp Policy 22 325ndash383 Grassian S amp Friedman N (1986) Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confinement International Journal of
53
general prison population (and mainstream society) from the IMU The more time a person spends in solitary confinement the more difficult their transition back into the general prison population Importantly our analyses of rates of IMU placement in DOC (discussed in particular in the first findings section of this report on patterns in restrictive housing use) suggest that (1) large numbers of prisoners experience IMU placements during their stay in DOC and (2) many prisoners cycle in and out of the IMU This suggests that these long -term effects of IMU placements may be common if not pervasive among DOC prisoners
In sum prisoners described and sta ff observed common challenges transitioning from the IMU back into the general prison population or back onto the streets Still those prisoners who had spent extended periods of time (years rather than months) in the IMU but who were ulti mately able to transition back into the gene ral prison populati on descr ibed significantly impr oved quality of life and well-being in their new surroundings
For instance our team interviewed one prisoner who spent a total of one year in the IM U When our team re -interviewed this prisone r i n 2018 he was at a camp at the lowest security level in the system grateful for his ldquofreedom rdquo back in communication with his family and feeling ready for his looming release date (within the year of the interview ) ldquoEverythingrsquos turned around real fast from being in the cell to just being almost like out in the world Theyre just letting you know that Im getting closer and closer to finally getting outrdquo Our team interviewed another prisoner who spent a total of two years in the IMU during which time he had no contact with his family and had engaged in repeated serious self-harm resulting in multiple surgeries When our team re -interviewed this prisoner in 2018 he was living in the general prison population with a cellmate had re -established a relationship with his young daughter While prisoners face ongoing mental
and her mother and had not engaged in self-harm health needs following IMU stays
in months many also appreciate increased family connections exhibit better behavior
In many cases prisoners pointed to a specific staff and experience overall improvements member who had gotten to know them expressed in well-being after leaving the IMU concern for their well-being and advocated for targeted interventions like family contact or transitional programs to facilitate transitioning out of the IMU Such targeted individualized treatment interventions often coordinated by Program Managers at the institution- level or the Mission Housing Administrator from
Law and P sychiatry 8(1) 49-65 Haney C amp Lynch M (1997) Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and so litary c onfinement New York Review of Law and Social Change 23 101-195
54
headquarters were critical to intervening to get some of the longer-term IMU prisoners back into the general prison population For instance one Program Manager said
I follow up with all of my offenders When they leave and go to the other institution after theyrsquove been out of here for three months Irsquoll go and visit them at their other institutions and see how theyrsquore doing Wersquove had a couple thatrsquove gone through the program twice and a lot of people are looked down on that and go lsquoOh if they didnrsquot learn the first time why is he going to learn a second timersquo Well hey it might take somebody four or five times before they get it Especially if theyrsquore between that 28 to 38 age range
Likewise the Mission Housing Administrator who follows individual maximum-custody IMU placements throughout the entire Washington DOC system noted ldquoWe have hundreds of success stories of people who have gotten out of IMUsrdquo He said he ldquoget(s) calls from moms every once in awhilerdquo thanking him for giving their sons a chance by letting them out of the IMU And he added he has ldquoa drawer full of letters from people saying thank yourdquo
Such stories stand as important reminders that even prisoners once thought to be unmanageable can improve outside of the IMU and learn to thrive in our communities even in spite of the many documented mental health challenges associated with having spent time in solitary confinement
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021
While data collection for this research project formally concluded in 2018 reform efforts within Washington DOC continued The Mission Housing Administrator continued to oversee all cases of long-term maximum custody IMU placements and to develop individualized interventions ndash from regular phone calls and exchanges of letters to facilitating more family contact ndash to assist in transitioning people out of the IMU Between 2018 and 2020 Washington DOC partnered with the Vera Institute of Justice to pursue further restrictive housing reform (and also joined a partnership with AMEND to improve overall correctional culture)20 In 2021 Vera Institute reported that overall restrictive housing use decreased by nearly ten percent between 2018
20 See PRESS RELEASE The Washington State Department of Corrections Partners with the Vera Institute to Focus on Restricted Housing Reforms May 16 2019 httpswwwdocwagovnews201905162019phtm
55
and 2020 and average and medium lengths of stay in IMU on maximum custody status decreased significantly by 18 and 33 percent respectively 21
Although the onset of COVID in early 2020 set som e of Washington DOC continues these restrictive housing reduction efforts back Washingt on to develop and implement DOC continues to implement additional reforms designed to strategies to reduce reliance
(1) further reduce reliance on restrictive housing on restrictive housing and (eliminating the sanction of disciplinary segregation improve conditions of shortening the maximum time in administrative segregation confinement in IMUs from 47 to 30 days implementing ldquoearned time creditsrdquo for
people assigned to maximum custody and piloting new hearings processes to divert ser iously mentally ill prisoners from restrictive housing ) and (2) improve conditions of confinement within restrictive housing units (increasing out- of-cell time implementing plans to t rack these increases through a program called Pipe permitting a broader range of visitors beyond immediate family and notifying emergency contacts when prisoners are placed in restrictive housing) In addition to these reforms Washington DOC has been and plans to continue ldquore -purposingrdquo IMU units for other less restrictive ldquomissionsrdquo like ldquosafe harborrdquo units for gang dropouts transition units for people moving between IMU and general population and a potential unit for people with traumatic brain injur ies As the Mission Housing Administrator said ldquowe are trying to take r estrictive housing beds away so they canrsquo t be filledrdquo 22
DOC has also been working to address IMU staff concerns DOC established a Steering Committee in 2018 including line staff m ental health professionals and correctional managers to help to develop and implement IMU -related policies By including line staff t his Committee directly addresses staff desi res documented in this repor t to be hear d and to have more input in IMU -related policy decisions In addition DOC developed a training handbook especially for IMU staff and now requires staff with IMU posts to complete a training program associated with this handbook within 6 months of beginning work in an IMU In sum DOC has
21 Rachel Friedrich ldquoWashington Corrections Continues Restrictive Housing Reformsrdquo Oct 28 2020 httpswwwdocwagovnews202010282020htm see a lso Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author)
22 See Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author) conversation with Tim Thrasher Feb 19 2021 (notes on file with author)
56
laid a strong groundwork from which to continue to implement many of the recommendations identified in the executive summary to this report
57
APPENDICES
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL
Legend 5 MaxIMU 4 OthIMU 3 Max SOUITP 2 Max Other
1 GP 0 UNK
IMU SOU CBCC OTH FIELD UNK PRISON
4 MAX 5 3 3 2 0 0
CUSTODY 3 CLO 4 1 1 1 1 1
LEVEL 2 MED 4 1 1 1 1 1
1 OTH 4 1 1 1 1 1
0 UNK 4 0 0 0 0 0
G17 Custody Population by Index Location and Custody Level
IMU SOU CBCC OTH PRISN FIELD UNK TOTALS
4 MAX 342 30 22 18 0 0 412
CUSTODY 3 CLO 77 56 400 988 32 0 1553
LEVEL 2 MED 103 74 43 3441 43 0 3704
1 OTH 69 149 16 10811 550 0 11595
0 UNK 12 0 0 470 146 51 679
TOTALS 603 309 481 15728 771 51 17943
58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020
1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020
Local RH Units AHCC
CRCC
TRU
WCCW
WSR-3a
WSR-3
WSP-4
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
0
80
101
64
0
0
40
0
80
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
0
0
40
0
0
0
Local RH Units Total
397 397 325 285 273 172 172 142
IMUs (Ad Seg Beds) CBCC-IMU
MCC-IMU
MICC-IMU
SCCC-IMU
WCC-IMU
WSP-IMU (N)
WSP-IMU (S)
CRCC IMU
124(62)
0
64(0)
0
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
100(100)
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
100(70)
IMUs Total 408 552 552 952 888 888 740 770
Sum Local RH + IMUs
805 949 877 1237 1163 1060 912 912
59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE
See next page
60
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher-Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Journal Justice Quarterly
Manuscript ID RJQY-2020-0181R2
Manuscript Type Original Article
Keywords Restrictive housing Solitary confinement Gangs Prison
The Version of Record of this manuscript has been published and is available in Justice Quarterly published online Dec 21 2020 httpsdoiorg1010800741882520201853800
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
Page 1 of 29 Justice QuarterlyTable 1 Washington DOC Population Characteristics 2002-2017
Cohort 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Age at Snapshot (in Years) 18 to 25 21 19 17 16 13 11 26 to 35 33 33 32 34 35 34 36 to 45 29 29 28 25 26 27 Over 45 17 20 23 25 27 28
Gender Female 7 8 8 8 8 8
Male 93 92 92 93 92 92 RaceEthnicity
White Non-Hispanic 60 63 62 60 61 60 Black Non-Hispanic 21 19 19 19 18 18
Hispanic 12 10 11 12 13 14 OtherUnknown 7 8 9 9 9 9
Most Serious Offense at Conviction Violent Non-Sex 41 42 44 46 46 48
Sex 17 17 20 20 20 19 Property 15 17 18 19 20 19
DrugOther 25 23 18 15 14 13 Missing 2 1 0 0 0 0
Sentence Length (in Months) Mean 879 891 948 998 1017 1009
Standard Deviation 1048 1071 1121 1173 1204 1246 Gang Affiliation by RacialEthnic STG
White 5 5 6 6 5 5 Black 9 9 9 10 10 10
Hispanic 4 5 6 8 9 9 Other 1 1 2 2 2 2
No Gang Affiliation 81 80 78 75 74 74
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17308 17288 17625 17943 Source Authorsrsquo Calculations Washington State Department of Corrections
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
For Peer ReviewOnly
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
350
Justice Quarterly Page 2 of 29
Figure 1 Percentage Change in IMU-Max Population IMU-Max Length of Stay (LOS) and Total Prison Population (Indexed at 2002) Washington DOC 2002-2017
100
150
200
250
300
Perc
enta
ge C
hang
e fr
om 2
002
50
0 2002
(=100) 2005 2008
Snapshot Year 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max Population IMU-Max LOS Total Prison Population
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
48495051525354555657585960
1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647
Page 3 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Table 2 Solitary Confinement in Washington State 2002-2017
2002 Num
Custody amp Confinement Level IMU-Max 149 09
IMU-AdDSeg 105 07 Max-Tx 18 01
Other-Max 34 02 General Population 15499 974
Out of StateUnknown 102 06
2005 Num
228 14 144 09 50 03 55 03
16270 965 105 06
Cohort 2008 2011
Num Num
338 20 472 27 337 19 177 10 44 03 35 02 11 01 27 02
16438 950 16440 951 140 08 137 08
2014 Num
283 16 291 17 42 02 20 01
16893 958 96 05
2017 Num
342 19 260 14 52 03 18 01
17121 954 150 08
Total IMU Total Maximum Custody
254 201
16 13
372 333
22 20
675 393
39 23
649 534
38 31
574 345
33 20
602 412
34 23
Cumulative Days Spent in IMU (Any Custody Status)dagger
Mean (St Dev) 431 (2115) 476 (2303) 562 (2568) 746 (3027) 804 (3271) 824 (3300)
Not placed in IMU 1-45 days
46-90 days 91-365 days
366 days or more (gt1 year) At least 1 day in IMU
12062 2128 499 728 490
3845
758 134 31 46 31 242
12673 2344 487 755 593
4179
752 139 29 45 35 248
12533 2606 583 890 695
4774
724 151 34 51 40 276
12120 2535 610
1041 981
5167
701 147 35 60 57 299
11863 2854 810
1050 1048 5762
673 162 46 60 59 327
11847 2985 928
1075 1108 6096
660 166 52 60 62 340
Days in IMU by Custody and Confinement Level Mean (St Dev)
IMU-Max IMU-AdDSeg
2270 1147
(1362) (1246)
3060 1169
(2392) (1212)
2839 906
(1929) (1169)
3477 1278
(2732) (1385)
3258 664
(3167) (779)
2140 709
(1296) (796)
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17307 17287 17625 17943
Source Authorsrsquo calculations Washington State Department of Corrections Changes in the use of local segregation for disciplinary and administrative purposes (outside of IMUs for prisoners classified lower than Max Custody) likely affect the counts of IMU-AdDSeg populations particularly in early cohort years Total IMU is the sum of all prisoners living in IMU units on July 1st including (i) IMU-Max those on maximum custody housed in IMUs and (ii) IMU-AdDSeg those who are housed in IMUs on lower custody levels including administrative segregation disciplinary segregation and awaiting hearings Total Maximum Custody consists of three groups all classified as maximum custody (i) those housed in IMUs (IMU-Max) (ii) those in SOU or ITP units (Max-Tx) and (iii) those located elsewhere (Other-Max) dagger Days spent in IMU represents cumulative days spent in IMU until the snapshot date for all prisoners regardless of custody classification during their current prison admission
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Justice Quarterly Page 4 of 29Table 3 Comparison of IMU-Max and General Prison Populations Washington DOC 2002-2017
Cohort 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2 IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen 3 Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop4
Background Characteristics 6 Age at Snapshot (Years) 7 18 to 25 36 21 24 19 31 16 24 15 19 13 20 11 8 9
26 to 35 36 to 45
40 17
33 29
40 22
32 29
43 15
32 29
45 18
34 26
41 20
34 26
47 20
34 27
11 Over 45 7 17 13 20 12 23 13 25 19 27 13 29 12 RaceEthnicity13 14
Black Non-Hispanic Hispanic
19 20
21 11
16 22
19 10
15 30
19 10
20 29
19 12
14 37
18 12
17 27
18 13
16 OtherUnknown 13 7 8 8 6 9 7 9 5 9 9 9 17 White Non-Hispanic 48 60 55 63 49 62 44 61 44 62 47 60 18 Most Serious Offense at 19 Conviction
21 22
Violent Non-Sex Sex
68 15
41 17
66 14
42 17
70 9
43 20
74 11
45 21
78 8
45 20
75 7
48 20
23 Property 8 16 10 17 14 19 11 19 10 20 11 20 24 DrugOther 9 25 9 23 7 18 4 16 4 14 7 13
Missing26 Age of First Conviction
1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 (Years)28 29 Under 18
18 to 25
12 69
4 45
9 69
3 45
10 69
3 45
10 65
3 46
8 67
3 46
8 69
3 45
31 Over 25 20 51 22 52 21 52 25 51 25 51 23 52 32 In-Prison Behavioral Profile 33 Gang Affiliation by34 RacialEthnic STG
36 37
White Black
14 22
4 9
21 14
5 9
20 12
5 9
15 14
5 10
15 11
5 10
14 16
4 10
38 Hispanic 21 4 22 4 39 5 33 7 40 8 32 8 39 Other 3 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 4 2 4 2
41 No Gang Affiliation 40 81 43 81 28 79 36 76 31 75 33 76
42 Annual Infraction Rate 43 44 Mean 83 13 51 11 53 11 42 10 47 10 49 11
St Dev 76 24 78 18 54 20 49 17 59 18 67 19 46 Violent Infractions 47 48 Mean 40 05 33 04 33 05 30 05 33 05 30 05
49 St Dev 58 15 45 14 42 15 40 16 43 16 34 16 Staff Assaults
51 52 53
Mean St Dev
12 33
01 04
07 22
00 04
07 20
00 04
07 21
01 05
08 25
01 05
06 20
01 05
54 Total Population 149 15499 228 16270 338 16438 472 16440 283 16893 342 17121
56 Source Authors calculations Washington State Department of Corrections 57 Statistically significant differences between IMU-Max and General Population (Gen Pop) at plt001 (for categorical chi square for 58 numeric t-test) 59
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Page 5 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher -Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Abstract This article presents a rare longitudinal analysis of solitary confinement use in one state prison system spanning 2002-2017 in the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) An ongoing partnership with DOC officials facilitated methodological and conceptual improvements allowing us to construct a dataset that provides a rich description of who is in solitary confinement for how long and why Operationalizing solitary confinement as the intersection of the most serious custody status with the most restrictive housing location we describe significant changes in ethnic composition and behavioral profiles of people in solitary confinement and in frequency and duration of solitary confinement use These results suggest how particular policy interventions have affected the composition numbers and lengths of stay in solitary confinement Combining longitudinal analysis and iterative engagement with DOC officials we provide a roadmap for better understanding solitary confinement use in the United States now and in the future
Tens of thousands of prisoners across the United States experience solitary confinement
annually (ASCA-Liman 2015 2018 Beck 2015) Prisoners generally spend no more than an
hour per day outside of cells the size of a wheelchair-accessible bathroom stall and eat cold
meals alone with limited access to natural light phones family visits or any human touch
Prisoners live not days but months and years under such conditions In tandem with mass
incarceration the use of solitary confinement expanded drastically across the United States in the
1980s and 1990s often in modern hyper-secure ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities (Reiter 2016 Riveland
1999 Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Though integral to incarceration since the prison was ldquobornrdquo and
perpetually controversial (Foucault 1977 Haney amp Lynch 1997 Smith 2006 Rubin amp Reiter
2018) solitary confinement has come under renewed scrutiny in the last decade (Reiter 2018
ASCA-Liman 2015) Federal and state correctional systems have begun to experiment with
mitigation and alternative programs Here we focus on a 15-year period during which the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) attempted to confront these issues and ask
whether and how a prison system might reduce its use of solitary confinement
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Justice Quarterly Page 6 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
The question of whether a prison system might change direction including how the
practice of solitary confinement might be constrained has animated criminological scholarship
over decades (eg Jacobs 1977 Liebling 1999 Petersilia 1991 Rhodes 2004 Reiter 2016
Rubin amp Reiter 2018) A longitudinal quantitative dataset with which to assess these questions
however is rare Our dataset analyzed in collaboration with practitioner partners allows us to
look both at individual faFor Peer Review Only ctors such as how many gang members with violent infraction histories
are placed in solitary confinement for how long in any given year and at institutional factors
including demographic shifts and policy changes which influence behavioral patterns (Toch
1977 Liebling 1999 Toch amp Adams 1989 Haney 2018)
Where scholars have used point-in-time datasets to examine the relationship between
individual and institutional factors in understanding the use and effects of solitary confinement
controversies abound over how to define and operationalize the practice (Kurki amp Morris 2001
Naday et al 2008 Mears et al 2019 Reiter 2016) We identify which prisoners are subjected
to the aversive conditions described above in terms of two factors 1) whether they are living in
units engineered to lock them down (location) and 2) the rules governing how long they stay
their conditions of confinement and movement (custody status) Here these measurement
principles are applied to a rich administrative dataset to ask 1 Who is in solitary confinement
for how long and why 2 How if at all do their individual characteristics including ethnicity
gang status and b ehavioral profiles change over time 3 What patterns emerge from this
analysis We show how the distribution and extent of solitary confinement use in Washington
has shifted with institutional vicissitudes in demographics capacity gang management policies
programming and classification systems
Trajectories of Solitary Confinement Placement
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Page 7 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Estimates of how many people experience solitary confinement annually range from
68000 prisoners to 18 of all prisoners in the United States or over 250000 people (ASCA-
Liman 2015 Beck 2015) To address definitional debates underlying conflicting estimates
Mears et al recently suggested a four-dimensional conceptual framework ndash goal duration
quality and intentionality ndash to describe the constellation of factors that make up solitary
confinement (or ldquorestric
o define solitary confinement a
conceptually and et
For Peer Review Only tive housingrdquo) practices (2019 1434) The operational focus of our
alternative approach allows us to bypass arguments about how t
hically controversial practice Rather our operational definition applies the
near-universal correctional functions of classification and movement to identify the sites and
subjects of solitary confinement from correctional tracking records These methods permit
consistent robust a nalyses of who is subjected to solitary confinement and the association of this
experience with institutional misconduct and other factors
Previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions about whether solitary confinement
has a disparate impact on groups defined by race or ethnicity Studies focusing on patterns in
disciplinary infractions and solitary confinement placements over four to six years tend to find
minimal disparities (Cochran et al 2018 Tasca amp Turanovic 2018) while point-in-time
comparisons of demographics of solitary confinement units with general population units
consistently find non-white prisoners over-represented in solitary confinement (Schlanger 2012
Reiter 2012) A recent study analyzed a survey that asked state prison systems to self-report
solitary confinement and gang-affiliated populations prisoners classified as gang members were
over-represented in solitary confinement across the United States (Pyrooz amp Mitchell 2019)
The study does not m ention race but others have noted the longstanding ties between race and
gangs in US prisons (Berger 2014 Bloom amp Martin 2013 Reiter 2016) strengthening Pyrooz
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Justice Quarterly Page 8 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and Mitchellrsquos recommendation to ldquointegrate measures of gang affiliation into correctional
researchrdquo (2019 22) as we do in our analysis
The relationship between solitary confinement and institutional order is also contested (eg
Briggs Sundt and Castellano 2003 Lovell Johnson amp Cain 2007) One recent study among
men in a three-year cohort in a mid-western DOC found that disciplinary segregation was
associated with a greater probability of misconduct (Labrecque amp Smith 2019) but another
study among men in a two-year cohort in the Oregon DOC found that disciplinary segregation
was not a significant predictor of subsequent institutional misconduct (Lucas amp Jones 2017)
Our dataset permits an evaluation of longer-term patterns of misconduct in and out of solitary
settings
One recent study expanded the usual short periods of analysis described in preceding studies
about both race and misconduct using nearly a decade (1987-96) of data from Kansas a prison
system small enough (5-7000 prisoners) to allow tracing of bed-level data to examine individual
correlates of solitary confinement placement such as race and also patterns in frequency and
duration of solitary confinement over time (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Our study takes an even
broader scale approach examining populations in and out of solitary confinement over 15 years
with 15000 or more prisoners per cohort following particular individuals and groups over
decades of criminal and correctional history
Attending to broader institutional forces at play over our study period is critical to our
approach Lynch recently argued that in studies of sentencing findings are often
ldquooperationalized as a single end-stage outcome that is unmoored from the social organizational
and institutional forces that help produce a class of defendants to be sentencedrdquo (2020 1159)
This critique could just as readily be applied to studies of solitary confinement (eg Cochran et
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Page 9 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
al 2018 Logan et al 2017) in which disparities in outcomes and differences in personal and
behavioral characteristics of prisoners are analyzed with limited attention to institutional patterns
such as fluctuations in bed capacity shifts in demographic make-up and reforms or
retrenchments in policies governing solitary confinement placement and release Our
longitudinal dataset allows us to generate individual-level and aggregate statistics on histories
and outcomes during incarceration and to place findings in the context of broader institutional
forces shaping those patterns
The administrative dataset analyzed here was collected as part of a multi-method project also
using ethnographic interview and archival data to evaluate solitary confinement use over time
in Washington (DOC) (Reiter et al 2020) This project extends a decades-long collaborative
relationship between researchers and DOC first between the University of Washington (UW)
and DOC through the Mental Health Collaboration (Allen et al 2001) later in a UW-led multi-
method systematic survey of Washingtonrsquos solitary confinement population in 1999-2000
(Lovell et al 2000 Rhodes 2004 Lovell 2008) and finally in this study replicating and
extending the 2000 study in collaboration with an original member of both previous studies
In rates of overall incarceration and solitary confinement use Washington DOC is below
average it has the 12th lowest rate of incarceration among the states (Kaeble amp Cowhig 2018)
and as of 2018 its reported proportion of population in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo (23) was half the
national average (45) (ASCA-Liman 2018 13)1 In terms of willingness to collaborate with
researchers however Washington DOC is above average current and former DOC leadership
have agreed there are knowledge gaps around solitary confinement invited scholars and
advocates alike to analyze and critique policies in order to address these gaps and participated
actively in collaborations both facilitating access to the administrative data underlying the
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Justice Quarterly Page 10 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
analyses presented here and helping to interpret results In particular Eldon Vail and Dan
Pacholke nationally recognized correctional policy experts led Washington DOC during part of
our study period and consulted with us on interpretation of findings
Research about solitary confinement use has been produced through practitioner-researcher
collaborations in a number of states including Colorado (OrsquoKeefe et al 2011) Florida (Mears
amp Bales 2009) Kansas (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) and Oregon (Pyrooz et al 2020) Few
however have attempted the quantitative and qualitative depth of this project which is more
comparable to the New York studies of Toch and colleagues (eg Toch amp Adams 1989 Toch
1977) conducted as the new ldquosupermaxrdquo era was coming upon us in the 1980s or the California
studies by Petersilia on re-entry and community supervision (eg Petersilia 2009) Ours
represents an intergenerational academic-practitioner collaboration spanning both eras
Data and Methods
This analysis draws on a longitudinal administrative record set of the entire DOC
population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and
2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of admissions and
releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12 million) infractions
(630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) Discussions with DOC research office
partners about how best to meet the data needs of our study exemplifying our academic-
practitioner collaboration led to two major expansions of the scope and power of this dataset
First to assess how solitary confinement populations had changed since the 2000 UW study
we requested archival information on prisoners in any form of solitary confinement on our
snapshot dates Lacking ready capacity to identify these prisoners DOC offered to provide data
for all prisoners in custody on these dates leaving it to us to identify who was in solitary
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Page 11 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
confinement and when Our willingness to pick our own apples from the DOC data tree led to a
30-fold expansion of our subject pool permitting longitudinal comparisons between solitary
confinement and general population prisoners Second DOC provided us all Washington prison
sentences in the entire history of prisoners in our vastly expanded dataset rather than only the
index offense data we had requested Although information about currently active convictions
accompanies prisoners as they move through DOC retrospectively retrieving links between court
and correctional records is complicated by the multiplicity of charges sentencing policies and
admission statuses that may apply Recognizing a systematic problem when we showed them a
pattern of missing data DOC provided the entire prison conviction history for the 57000 prisoners
in our expanded subject population allowing us both to identify the most serious current offense
and to provide a consistent measure of prisonersrsquo criminal histories
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying uniform coding procedures to
compile event-level data into a subject-level dataset We computed the facility location and
custody status of every prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at
each location and subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as
infractions Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and
plausible counts and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all
prisoners in six snapshot cohorts We also use some inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-
tests) in the analyses we present to test for differences across cohorts and groups
Terminology In Washington DOC policy (2020 320250) maximum custody status is the
highest level of custody classification Maximum custody prisoners are assessed in formal
hearings to pose a sufficient risk to safety ndash whether their own or others ndash to warrant holding
them for an extended period in a maximum-security location isolated by architecture procedure
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Justice Quarterly Page 12 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and staffing As legal expert Fred Cohen notes maximum custody is a risk-based classification
justified as a preventive measure rather than a punitive sanction (2008) In Washington DOC
prisoners first enter solitary confinement through short-term administrative segregation (Ad-
Seg) placements usually awaiting adjudication following an infraction Infraction of a specific
prison rule may result in a disciplinary hearing and the sanction of a disciplinary segregation (D-
Seg) placement Alternatively multiple infractions other behavior patterns or an extended stay
in administrative segregation may lead to a re-classification as maximum custody (Max)
In DOC Intensive Management Units (IMUs) are the most secure housing facilities The
term ldquosupermaxrdquo is not a category of institution in DOC instead the state has five IMUs located
at Clallam Bay Corrections Center (CC) Monroe CC Washington CC (ldquoSheltonrdquo) Stafford
Creek CC and the Washington State Penitentiary (called Walla Walla or the ldquoconcrete mamardquo
(Hoffman amp McCoy 2018)) IMUs feature distinct security perimeters with advanced
technology for controlling entrances gates and doors strict procedures for prisoner movement
and no normal occasions for prisoners to share space with others unless shackled Though exact
conditions (like cell size and degree of access to natural light) vary across IMUs the uniformly
restrictive conditions impose intense isolation (often for extended periods of time) comparable to
conditions in other state supermaxes IMUs are adjacent to the ldquomain institutionrdquo (a correctional
center or complex may have multiple facilities or stand-alone buildings sharing a common
Superintendent) to allow escorting prisoners on foot without delay As a Lieutenant at Shelton
said during a prison visit ldquoNothing happens fast around here except going to the IMUrdquo
Transfers between facilities are recorded in DOCrsquos movement records allowing us to
identify who was placed in IMUs and for how long Transfers in and out of cells within a facility
however are recorded as housing changes likely 50 million in number for our subjects vastly
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Page 13 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
exceeding our and DOCrsquos ability to retrieve and compile absent unlimited resources2 Therefore
inter-facility movement records in our data do not capture prisoners isolated on Ad-Seg or D-Seg
status (AdDSeg status) inside a main institution Importantly AdDSeg prisoners who were
living under comparably stringent conditions as IMU-Max prisoners in two decrepit segregation
units within the main institutions at two of Washingtonrsquos oldest prisons ndash Walla Walla and
Monroe ndash are not captured in our data These two units with a combined capacity of 250 closed
in 2011 but were replaced (and then some) by 200 new IMU beds at each prison Our inability
to identify all such AdDSeg prisoners through movement records requires caution in how the
terms ldquoIMUrdquo versus ldquosolitary confinementrdquo are used in our findings Because of this limitation
we center our trend and comparative analyses on the maximum custody group who are reliably
identified over the entire course of our study period and whose long-term presence in maximum
security settings raises the sharpest ethical issues (Lovell 2014)
Results
To contextualize findings on the size and characteristics of Washingtonrsquos solitary
confinement population we first describe overall patterns in the state prison population between
2002 and 2017 Table 1 displays counts and demographic crime type sentence length and gang
affiliation characteristics for the entire prison population incarcerated on each of the six snapshot
dates Washington Statersquos prison population grew by 13 despite changes in sentencing policy
(SHB2338 2002) that were expected to reduce imprisonment by lessening penalties and
providing treatment alternatives for drug-related offenses The proportion of prisoners
incarcerated for drug or other offenses declined substantially while those incarcerated for
violent non-sexual offenses increased by nearly 17 between 2002 and 2017 (plt001)3
Reflecting the shift toward more violent offenses average sentence lengths increased
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Justice Quarterly Page 14 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
significantly as did the average age of prisoners The proportion of Hispanic prisoners increased
by 17 while the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners decreased by 16 (plt001) and
White non-Hispanic representation remained stable4
Affiliation with security threat groups (STG) or prison gangs increased as well in 2017
over one in four prisoners (26) was identified as a member of an STG up from 19 in 2002
The growth of gang affiliation was not equally distributed across racial and ethnic groups5
While rates of gang affiliation for White non-Hispanic prisoners remained relatively low over
the fifteen-year period gang affiliation among prisoners of color increased substantially
between 2002 and 2017 the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners classified as gang-
affiliated rose from 35 to 41 for Hispanic prisoners from 28 to 53 a sharp increase with
substantial consequences for solitary confinement practices
[TABLE 1 NEAR HERE]
Disentangling the Solitary Population Table 2 presents trends in solitary confinement use by
both custody status (classification) and location (facility) We distinguish four groups either
classified at the highest custody level (Maximum labeled ldquoMaxrdquo) or located in the most
restrictive locations (IMUs) At the center of our analysis are prisoners both classified Max and
housed in IMUs (denoted by IMU-Max) Next are prisoners who have not been reclassified
Max but are housed in IMUs for administrative or disciplinary segregation (IMU-AdDSeg)
Third for treatment purposes some Max prisoners are housed at the Special Offender Unit
(SOU) at Monroe designed to address serious behavioral health needs or at the Inmate
Transitional Pod (ITP) at Clallam Bay a program-focused unit for prisoners transitioning out of
solitary confinement (denoted by Max-Tx) Finally a residual group of Max prisoners could not
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Page 15 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
For Peer Review Only
be assigned a facility type because on the snapshot date they were on hospital or court release
or awaiting transfers to an IMU SOU or ITP (Other-Max)6
Solitary confinement use (in IMU-Max IMU-AdDseg and Total IMU) far outpaces
population growth over our study period in the state growing at least 130 (in IMU-Max)
compared to a 13 growth in the state prison population As explained earlier IMU-Max
represents a clearly defined population with reliable snapshot counts for prisoners subjected to
long-term solitary confinement over the entire study period but it excludes prisoners in AdDSeg
either in the IMU or in other within-facility units not identifiable in the between-facility
movement records we analyze Figure 1 illustrates differences in rates and patterns of growth in
IMU-Max and total prison populations accompanied by changes in average length of stay (LOS)
for the IMU-Max group on their snapshot date assignments
[TABLE 2 amp FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE]
One-day counts capture those physically held in IMUs on snapshot dates and demonstrate
that a small but increasing proportion of Washingtonrsquos prison population was held in solitary
confinement across snapshots in both IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg groups One-day counts
however do not account for movement in and out of IMUs at other points To better understand
both the prevalence and duration of placement in solitary we used event-level movement
information to calculate the cumulative amount of time each prisoner spent in solitary
confinement from admission to snapshot date Over the study period a majority of prisoners in
DOC in each snapshot cohort were never placed in solitary confinement but a substantial and
growing proportion of prisoners had spent time in these units The proportion of prisoners
spending at least one day in an IMU between their prison admission and snapshot dates had
increased from 242 in 2002 to 34 in 2017 Prisoners in 2002 spent an average of 6 weeks in
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Justice Quarterly Page 16 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
IMUs from admission to snapshot by 2017 time spent in IMU increased significantly to an
average of 12 weeks (plt001) Changes in mean values are skewed by a few outliers who have
spent their entire (long or life) prison sentences in an IMU beginning decades before and
extending through the study period To counter the skew we binned cumulative days in IMU
into distinct groups 0 days 1-45 days 46-90 days 91 days to 1 year and over 1 year7
Pooling across all cohorts we find that more than half of those who spent at least one day in
an IMU stayed for between 1 and 45 days cumulatively The second largest group (186)
cumulatively spent between three months and one year in solitary confinement and a substantial
proportion (165) of those placed in an IMU spent more than one year there The changing
distribution of cumulative time spent in IMUs reinforces the finding that average time spent in
solitary increased over the study period More prisoners spent at least one day in IMU and
proportions of prisoners in each cumulative length of stay group increased substantially led by
those spending between 46 and 90 days and those spending more than one year in IMU In total
our data demonstrate a greater prevalence of IMU placement across the population over time
and an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs8
In addition to examining cumulative days spent in IMU for the full prison population we
also calculated mean lengths of stay (LOS) in IMUs for both the IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg
groups9 Both groups spent substantial amounts of time in IMU settings although as expected
those in IMU-Max had markedly longer stays in IMU than the IMU-AdDSeg group Across the
study period average time in IMU-Max ranged from 7 to 12 months compared to 2 to 4 months
for the IMU-AdDSeg group The mean LOS for IMU-Max fluctuated generally increasing
until 2011 followed by a decline through 2017 to a level just below the mean LOS in 2002
(Figure 1) For the IMU-AdDSeg group mean LOS dropped even more substantially after
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Page 17 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
2011 Changes in average LOS for both groups were a factor in periods of growth in total IMU
populations prior to 2008 as well as in declines of IMU populations after 2011
The Maximum Custody IMU Population Table 3 compares demographic criminal history gang
status and behavioral histories of IMU-Max and general population (GP) prisoners across
snapshots10 showing significant differences between these groups In both populations White
non-Hispanic prisoners represented the largest group However compared to the GP prisoners
of Hispanic ethnicity were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max while White non-
Hispanic prisoners are under-represented (plt001) Black non-Hispanic people were slightly
under-represented among IMU-Max prisoners relative to their presence in the GP These
disparities diverge over time the proportion of Hispanic prisoners in the IMU-Max population
increased by nearly 34 between 2002 and 2017 while the proportions of all other racial and
ethnic groups decreased
[TABLE 3 ABOUT HERE]
IMU-Max prisoners have more serious conviction and in-prison misconduct histories
than GP prisoners Across cohorts nearly three-quarters (73) of IMU-Max prisoners were
convicted of non-sexual violent offenses compared with just 44 of GP prisoners The IMU-
Max group were also first convicted of prison-eligible offenses at a younger age on average
than those in the GP (plt001) Further in-prison misconduct rates were higher and more serious
for the IMU-Max group annual infraction rates for these prisoners were more than double GP
rates and IMU-Max prisoners committed far more violent infractions and staff assaults than
those in GP (plt001)11 Nevertheless serious misconduct appeared to decline substantially
across IMU-Max prisoner snapshots (but not for GP) with average annual infraction rates among
IMU-Max prisoners falling from 83 in 2002 to 49 in 2017 (plt001) average numbers of violent
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Justice Quarterly Page 18 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
infractions decreasing from 4 to 3 (plt05) and average numbers of staff assaults decreasing from
12 to 06 (plt05)
Gang members were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max compared to GP (66
to 22 pooled across all snapshot years) While the prevalence of gang membership grew in
both groups over time patterns of gang affiliation across racial-ethnic sub-categories behaved
differently within the IMU-Max and GP groups Among GP prisoners the proportion of those
affiliated with Hispanic gangs grew by 118 from 2002 to 2017 among IMU-Max prisoners
Hispanic gang membership grew substantially (55) but at a lower rate than in the GP Black
gang membership on the other hand grew by just 7 in the GP but fell by 24 among IMU-
Max prisoners Explaining these patterns is outside the scope of the present analysis but the
scale of divergence in patterns across both racial-ethnic sub-categories of gang affiliates and GP
and IMU-Max populations merits future attention
Discussion
Our findings draw on an especially robust dataset including (1) multiple individual
characteristics like gang status and infraction rates each one of which has constituted the sole
focus of previous analyses (2) snapshot data that covers both the entire prison population and
each individualrsquos entire criminal and incarceration history and (3) a fifteen-year period of
analysis over six snapshot dates a longer time period than in previous studies of solitary
confinement Such a rich dataset makes a succinct analysis of a subset of findings challenging to
present Here we focus on our analytic methods an overview of the characteristics of people in
and out of solitary confinement and overall patterns in solitary confinement use
First we measure the sites subjects and varieties of solitary confinement in terms of the
intersection of location and custody status This operational taxonomy along with the prisoner
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For Peer Review Only
Page 19 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
characteristics associated with solitary confinement placements was achieved by developing an
extensive population analysis script that compiled a correctional dataset tracking events
movements and dispositions into an analytic dataset permitting analysis of patterns of prisoner
behavior and facility placements over time Our multi-generational researcher-practitioner
collaboration with Washington DOC facilitated both obtaining and interpreting this data In turn
we hope our operational taxonomy will facilitate more precise measurements of solitary
confinement use applicable and comparable across the vicissitudes of different correctional
systemsrsquo varied labels for security levels housing locations and solitary confinement practices
(eg Mears et al 2019)
Second we provide an overview and comparison of characteristics of people in solitary
confinement focusing on the specifically targeted IMU-Max group to provide a clear contrast to
general population prisoners Over time the average IMU-Max prisoner was increasingly likely
to be older Hispanic convicted of a violent offense and gang affiliated but decreasingly likely
to have assaulted a staff member Like Pyrooz amp Mitchell (2019) we find gang members over-
represented in solitary confinement relative to their representation in the general prison
population We also find that Hispanic prisoners are increasingly over-represented in solitary
confinement providing evidence of the racially disproportionate impact of solitary confinement
(eg Sakoda amp Simes 2019 Schlanger 2012 Reiter 2012) Our longitudinal analysis shows this
disproportion steadily increasing over time at a faster rate than gang membership in the general
prison system which increased only slightly over our period of analysis As in other studies
finding misconduct associated with solitary confinement placement (eg Labrecque amp Smith
2019) we find that prisoners in solitary confinement have significantly and consistently higher
annual infraction violent infraction and staff assault rates than general population prisoners
15 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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Justice Quarterly Page 20 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
However all three measures of infractions despite remaining fairly stable throughout the
system generally declined in IMU-Max over time
Rendering population patterns visible also renders visible new questions about what
combination of individual behavior patterns and institutional policies produce the changes we
see Have IMU-Max prisoners become less violent and dangerous Have institutional policies
about identifying gang members and behavioral or affiliation criteria for max custody changed
When the UW solitary confinement study was conducted 20 years ago pioneering experiments
in relaxing the stringency of solitary confinement conditions and supporting prisoners in
changing course had begun at Shelton (Rhodes 2004) at that time Washington DOC leaders
justified IMUs as a necessary response to White Supremacist groups and IMU reforms focused
on mitigating organized attacks and challenges to correctional authority by these groups The late
2010s brought another round of reforms attempting to relax the stringent conditions of solitary
confinement this time factional rivalries among gang-affiliated Hispanic prisoners first justified
IMU placements and then became the focus of reform efforts (Warner et al 2014) This
relationship between shifts in prison population demographics behavior patterns and
correctional attention to specific sub-categories of gangs perceived as particularly dangerous
deserves further analysis but identifying the relevant trends as we do here is a first step
Third we see changing patterns in solitary confinement use over time Overall the
prevalence and duration of solitary confinement grew across Washingtonrsquos prison population
between 2002 and 2017 The raw numbers and rates of both Max custody status prisoners and
prisoners in IMU locations more than doubled from 2002 to 2017 And an increasing proportion
of people throughout the system experienced solitary confinement in 2017 more than 1 in 3
prisoners had spent at least a day in solitary compared to 1 in 4 in 2002 This trend echoes and
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 16
For Peer Review Only
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Page 21 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
quantifies Sakoda amp Simesrsquo argument that solitary confinement is a ldquonormal event during
imprisonmentrdquo (2019 2) Although rates of solitary confinement use increased overall average
lengths of stay in solitary confinement (which peaked in 2011 in tandem with the peak years of
solitary confinement use in Washington) decreased By 2017 average lengths of stay on IMU-
Max and IMU-AdDSeg (along with the standard deviations) were the shortest they had been in
the state since 2002 This analysis reveals that Washington DOC had some success in reducing
its use of solitary confinement from peak levels and especially in shortening lengths of stay in
these conditions But what forces facilitated or constrained these reductions
The dramatic shifts we document in both numbers of people in solitary confinement and
durations of stays ndash without any associated dramatic shifts in the usually assumed behavioral
predictors of solitary confinement like overall institutional rates of gang membership or violent
infractions ndash suggest the influence of other institutional factors (cf Lynch 2020) While
additional analysis is needed we can thanks to our iterative conversations with DOC officials
suggest two institutional factors that influenced rates and durations of solitary confinement use
during periods of abrupt change bed capacity increases and local-level rehabilitative
programming changes
First between 2000 and 2008 while DOCrsquos expanding capacity was continually
outpaced by population growth (despite legislative changes intended to reduce imprisonment
WSIPP 2006) IMU capacity in Washington expanded by 520 beds Three years later in 2011
both IMU-Max counts and average LOS peaked Both then decreased in tandem with decreasing
IMU capacity down 212 beds as of 2017 as some units were re-purposed for other special
groups such as parole violators and managed with far less restrictive protocols While the
relationship between capacity IMU counts and length of stay deserves its own focused analysis
17 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 22 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
we have taken the first step by identifying relevant trends These findings suggest that
constraining capacity is likely a key to long-term reductions in solitary confinement along with
reducing lengths of stay and rate of assignments into maximum security settings like IMUs
Second between 2011 and 2014 Washington DOC built upon previous local initiatives
at Clallam Bay and Walla Walla IMUs embarking on an effort to ldquoreinvent what segregation can
berdquo partnering with Vera Institute of Justice eliminating some aversive disciplinary policies
and introducing facility-specific missions and group rehabilitative programming across IMUs
(Neyfakh 2015) Both the temporary drop in IMU-Max populations in 2014 and the more
sustained decreases in average lengths of stay for this population between 2011 and 2017 are tied
to these interventions
The correctional population analysis presented in this study exemplifies an approach to
research and collaboration suited to improving the ability of corrections systems to track changes
in prisoner characteristics lengths of stay and overall rates of placement in various forms of
solitary confinement Rendering such patterns visible strengthens researcher-practitioner
collaboration revealing in Washingtonrsquos case what is working ie sustained reductions in
lengths of solitary confinement stays and what is not working ie less sustained reductions in
rates of solitary confinement use By displaying institutional patterns our collaborative research
findings also suggest avenues of analysis to improve outcomes for prisoners and in prison
settings
MAIN TEXT WORD COUNT 6082
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 18
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 23 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
References
Allen DG Lovell DG amp Rhodes LA Correctional mental health a research agenda In JJ
Fitzpatrick PA White eds Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Research Digest New York
Springer pp 180-184
Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
Yale Law School (ASCA-Liman) (2015) Time-In-Cell The ASCA-Liman 2014 National
Survey of Administrative Segregation in Prison (Aug) Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca-
liman_administrativesegregationreportpdf
__ (2018) Reforming restrictive housing The 2018 ASCA-Liman nationwide survey of time-in-
cell Report issued by the Association of State Correctional Administrators (ASCA) amp the
Liman Center for Public Interest Law at Yale Law School Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca_liman_2018_restrictiv
e_housing_released_oct_2018pdf
Beck A J (2015) Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 201112 Washington DC
Bureau of Justice Statistics Government Printing Office Retrieved from
httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112pdf
Berger D (2014) Captive Nation Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina Press
Bloom J and WE Martin (2013) Black Against Empire The History and Politics of the Black
Panther Party Berkeley University of California Press
Briggs CS JL Sundt and TC Castellano (2003) ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security
prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 1341-1376
19 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 24 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Cochran JC E L Toman D P Mears amp W D Bales (2018) Solitary Confinement as
Punishment Examining In-Prison Sanctioning Disparities Justice Quarterly 35(3) 381-411
Cohen Fred 2008 Penal isolation beyond the seriously mentally ill Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 1017-1047
Foucault M (1977) Discipline and Punish The Birth of the Prison New York Pantheon Books
Haney Craig ldquoThe Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement A Systematic Critiquerdquo
Crime and Justice 47 no 1 (2018) pp 365-416
Haney C amp Lynch M 1997 Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of
supermax and solitary confinement NYU Review of Law amp Social Change 23 477ndash570
Hoffman E amp McCoy J 2018 Concrete Mama Prison Profiles from Walla Walla Seattle WA
University of Washington Press
Kaeble D Cowhig M (2018) Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121
US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018
Kurki L amp N Morris (2001) The Purposes Practices and Problems of Supermax Prisons Crime
and Justice 28 358-424
Labrecque R M amp Smith P (2019) Assessing the impact of time spent in restrictive housing
confinement on subsequent measures of institutional adjustment among men in prison Criminal
Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1445-1455
Liebling A (1999) ldquoDoing Research in Prison Breaking the Silencerdquo Theoretical Criminology
Vol 3147ndash73
Logan MW B Dulisse S Peterson MA Morgan TM Olma P Pareacute (2017) Correctional
shorthands Focal concerns and the decision to administer solitary confinement Journal of
Criminal Justice 52 90-100
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 20
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For Peer Review Only
Page 25 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Lucas J W amp Jones M A (2019) An analysis of the deterrent effects of disciplinary segregation
on institutional rule violation rates Criminal Justice Policy Review 30(5) 765-787
Lovell DG 2008 Patterns of disturbance in a supermax population Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 985-1004
Lovell DG (2014) Isolation Vignettes Practical applications of strict scrutiny The Correctional
Law Reporter 26(1) 3
Lovell DG Cloyes KC Allen DG amp Rhodes LA 2000 Who lives in super-maximum
custody A Washington State study Federal Probation 64(2) 33-38
Lovell DG C Johnson KC Cain 2007 Recidivism of Supermax Prisoners in Washington
State Crime and Delinquency 53(4) 633-56
Lynch M (2019) Focally Concerned About Focal Concerns A Conceptual and Methodological
Critique of Sentencing Disparities Research Justice Quarterly 36(7) 1148-1175
Mears D P Hughes V Pesta G B Bales W D Brown J M Cochran J C amp Wooldredge
J (2019) The new solitary confinement A conceptual framework for guiding and assessing
research and policy on ldquoRestrictive housingrdquo Criminal Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1427-
1444
Mears DP amp WD Bales (2009) Supermax Incarceration and Recidivism Criminology 47(4)
1131-66
National Institute of Justice (NIJ) (2016) Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and
Future Directions Washington DC National Institute of Justice
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nij250315pdf
21 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 26 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Neyfakh L 2015 What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate 432015
httpsslatecomnews-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-
surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml
OrsquoKeefe Maureen L Kelli J Klebe Alysha Stucker Kristin Sturm amp William Leggett (2011) One
Year Longitudinal Study of the Psychological Effects of Administrative Segregation Document
No 232973 Washington DC National Criminal Justice Research Service National Institute
of Justice wwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants 232973pdf
Petersilia J (1991) Policy Relevance and the Future of Criminology Criminology 29(1) 1-15
__ (2009) When Prisoners Come Home Parole and Prisoner Re-entry New York Oxford
University Press
Pyrooz D C amp M M Mitchell (2019) The Use of Restrictive Housing on Gang and Non- Gang
Affiliated Inmates in US Prisons Findings from a National Survey of Correctional Agencies
Justice Quarterly 37(4) 590-615
Pyrooz DC RM Labrecque JJ Tostlebe amp B Useem (2020) Views on COVID-19 from Inside
Prison Perspectives of High-security Prisoners Justice Evaluation Journal doi
1010802475197920201777578
Reiter K (2012) Parole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007
Punishment amp Society 14(5) 530-63
__ (2016) 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven
Yale University Press)
__ (2018) ldquoAfter Solitary Confinementrdquo Studies in Law Politics and Society Vol 77 1-29
Reiter K J Ventura D Lovell D Augustine M Barragan T Blair K Chesnut P Dashtgard
G Gonzalez N Pifer J Strong (2020) ldquoPsychological Distress in Solitary Confinement
Symptoms Severity and Prevalence United States 2017-18rdquo American Journal of Public
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 22
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 27 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Health Vol 110 S52-S56
Rhodes LA (2004) Total Confinement Madness and Reason in Maximum Security Berkeley
CA University of California Press
Riveland C (1999) Supermax prisons Overview and general considerations Washington DC
National Institute of Corrections httpstaticnicicgovLibrary014937pdf
Rubin A T amp Reiter K (2018) Continuity in the Face of Penal Innovation Revisiting the
History of American Solitary Confinement Law amp Social Inquiry Vol 434 1604-1632
Sakoda RT amp Simes JT (2019) Solitary Confinement and the US Prison Boom Criminal
Justice Policy Review doi 1011770887403419895315
Schlanger M (2012) Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial
disparities Michigan Journal of Race amp Law 18 241
Smith Peter S 2006 The Effects of Solitary Confinement on Prison Inmates A Brief History and
Review of the Literature In Michael Tonry (ed) Crime and Justice 34 441-528
State of Washington SHB1765 1993
Tasca Melinda amp J Turanovic (2018) Examining Race and Gender Disparities in Restrictive
Housing Placements National Institute of Justice WEB Du Bois Program of Research on
Race and Crime Project SummaryDoc No 252062
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants252062pdf
Toch Hans (1977) Living in Prison The Ecology of Survival New York Free Press
Toch H amp Adams K w Grant D (1989) Coping Maladaptation in prisons Washington DC
Transaction Publishers revised as Acting Out American Psychological Association 2002
23 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 28 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Warner B D Pacholke amp C Kujath (2014) Operation Place Safety First Year in Review
(Washington State Department of Corrections)
httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
WSIPP (Washington State Institute for Public Policy) (2006) Evidence-Based Public Policy
Options to Reduce Future Prison Construction Criminal Justice Costs and Crime Rates
httpswwwwsippwagovReportFile952Wsipp_Evidence-Based-Public-Policy-Options-to-
Reduce-Future-Prison-Construction-Criminal-Justice-Costs-and-Crime-Rates_Full-
Reportpdf
Acknowledgements The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Eldon Vail Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Formerly of the University of Washington Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor and L Clark Johnson provided critical advice at early stages of data compilation At the University of California Irvine Keely Blissmer helped to compile the literature review Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Pasha Dashtgard Gabriela Gonzalez and Justin Strong all participated in data collection and analysis at various stages of this project Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
Funding Details This work was supported by the Langeloth Foundation and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
Disclosure Statement None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
1 In a timely example of how relevant the analysis in the instant study is DOC research staff recently noted that they ldquohad some concernsrdquo with these numbers as originally reported and have revised them upwards re-calculating that in 2015 34 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo according to the ASCA-Liman Definition and in 2017 41 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo by this definition E-mail communication with DOC Department of Research dated Sept 25 and Sept 28 2020 on file with authors The ASCA-Liman report defines ldquorestrictive housingrdquo as ldquoseparating prisoners from the general population and holding them in cells for an average of 22 or more hours per day for 15 continuous days or morerdquo 2 Intra-facility housing changes and periods spent in recently decommissioned internal solitary confinement units are better captured in our related intensive field study dataset of 106 solitary confinement prisoners (Reiter et al 2020) 3 General crime types were derived from DOC codes in the administrative data Violent non-sex offenses include murder manslaughter robbery and assault sex offenses include rape sexual assault child molestation and failure to register as a sex offender property crimes include arson burglary theft forgery trafficking and possession of
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 24
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For Peer Review Only
Page 29 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
stolen property drug crimes include manufacturing delivering or possession with intent to distribute and possession of a controlled substance 4 To avoid confusion we follow DOCs terminology with the term Hispanic which DOC codes separately from race as lsquoHispanic Originrsquo (YN) but we apply these data to define mutually exclusive categories ldquoWhite non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as White and who is not classified as Hispanic Origin ldquoBlack non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as Black and not identified as Hispanic ldquoHispanicrdquo includes any individual whose ethnicity is listed as Hispanic or Latino regardless of any other racial identification ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as AsianPacific Islander Native AmericanAmerican Indian Other Unknown and whose ethnicity is not Hispanic 5 Rates of gang affiliation by racialethnic group were generated by dividing the total number of members in each racialethnic group identified as an STG member by the total number of prisoners of each racialethnic group Table 1 displays the STG membership by racialethnic affiliation of STGs grouped from detailed STG data provided by DOC STGs identified as ldquoWhiterdquo affiliated included Biker Skinhead White Supremacist and Security Threat Concern ldquoBlackrdquo affiliated included Black Gangster Disciples Blood Crip and Vice Lord ldquoHispanicrdquo affiliated included Nortentildeo Surentildeo Paisas La Fuma Cuban and Hispanic-Other ldquoOtherrdquo affiliated included Asian and Other 6 Our original analysis identified an even larger proportion of prisoners in this ldquoOther-Maxrdquo group our practitioner collaborators thought more than 10 was an unlikely proportion of prisoners to be assigned max custody status but still awaiting placement in an IMU or similar facility and encouraged us to evaluate whether some of those ldquoOther-Maxrdquo prisoners were housed out-of-state Indeed when we examined individual cases in the original movement files we found this was true leading us to better specify and exclude those prisoners in our sample of any custody status who were housed out of state 7 Here the 45-day cut point reflects institutionally-mandated administrative hearings required to extend or release an individual from administrative segregation Likewise for those classified as Max (re-)classification reviews only happen every 6-12 months as reflected in the overall longer mean lengths of stay for IMU-Max as opposed to IMU-AdDSeg groups Both represent examples of policies driving patterns in lengths of stay 8 This analysis uses the person (in custody as of the snapshot date) as the unit of analysis Even if a single person has multiple stays in an IMU during the current admission up to the snapshot date they would be counted only once as ldquohaving spent at least one day in an IMUrdquo We further examined the average percentage of days spent in an IMU out of the total number of days in prison up to the snapshot date for each cohort finding an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs across the cohorts While not presented here in detail this finding reinforces the trends in the cumulative time spent in IMU and average LOS analyses 9 Unlike the cumulative days in IMU calculations the average length of stay by classification and confinement levels presented here do not cumulate days in IMU facilities Here each placement in a distinct IMU facility is analyzed as a separate placement term Thus if one prisoner is placed in IMU facility A and subsequently moved to IMU facility B the length of stay in each placement will be counted separately (To the extent individuals have consecutive stays across multiple IMUs then these numbers might undercount average lengths of total stay) Length of stay is calculated from admission date in the current incarceration up until the snapshot date 10 The general population (GP) excludes prisoners housed in IMUs prisoners with a max custody classification held in other locations (ie those in SOU ITP or ldquoOther Locationsrdquo) prisoners held out of state and prisoners whose locations or custody statuses were unknown 11 Violent infractions include seven infraction types aggravated assault on another offender fighting possession of a weapon aggravated assault on a staff member sexual assault of a staff member assault on another offender sexual assault of another offender and assault on a staff member
25 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE
See next page
91
ID
ID
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
PLOS ONE
OPEN ACCESS
Citation Strong JD Reiter K Gonzalez G Tublitz R Augustine D Barragan M et al (2020) The body in isolation The physical health impacts of incarceration in solitary confinement PLoS ONE 15 (10) e0238510 httpsdoiorg101371journal pone0238510
Editor Andrea Knittel University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill UNITED STATES
Received February 19 2020
Accepted August 18 2020
Published October 9 2020
Peer Review History PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process therefore we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final published articles The editorial history of this article is available here httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510
Copyright copy 2020 Strong et al This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original author and source are credited
Data Availability Statement Data cannot be shared publicly because the administrative data we analyze in this paper is drawn from a confidential data file shared with the research team for the
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The body in isolation The physical health
impacts of incarceration in solitary
confinement
Justin D Strong 1 Keramet Reiter1 Gabriela Gonzalez1Dagger Rebecca Tublitz1Dagger
Dallas Augustine1Dagger Melissa Barragan1Dagger Kelsie Chesnut 1Dagger Pasha Dashtgard2Dagger
Natalie Pifer3Dagger Thomas R Blair4Dagger
1 Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Irvine California United
States of America 2 Department of Psychological Sciences University of California Irvine Irvine California
United States of America 3 Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice The University of Rhode Island
Kingston Rhode Island United States of America 4 Department of Psychiatry Southern California
Permanente Medical Group Downey Los Angeles California United States of America
These authors contributed equally to this work
Dagger These authors also contributed equally to this work GG and RT are joint assistant authors on this work
jdstronguciedu
Abstract
We examine how solitary confinement correlates with self-reported adverse physical health
outcomes and how such outcomes extend the understanding of the health disparities associ-
ated with incarceration Using a mixed methods approach we find that solitary confinement is
associated not just with mental but also with physical health problems Given the dispropor-
tionate use of solitary among incarcerated people of color these symptoms are most likely to
affect those populations Drawing from a random sample of prisoners (n = 106) in long-term
solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections in 2017 we con-
ducted semi-structured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assess-
ments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for these subjects We also
conducted a paper survey of the entire long-term solitary confinement population (n = 225
respondents) and analyzed administrative data for the entire population of prisoners in the
state in 2017 (n = 17943) Results reflect qualitative content and descriptive statistical analy-
sis BPRS scores reflect clinically significant somatic concerns in 15 of sample Objective
specification of medical conditions is generally elusive but that itself is a highly informative
finding Using subjective reports we specify and analyze a range of physical symptoms expe-
rienced in solitary confinement (1) skin irritations and weight fluctuation associated with the
restrictive conditions of solitary confinement (2) un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
associated with the restrictive policies of solitary confinement (3) musculoskeletal pain exac-
erbated by both restrictive conditions and policies Administrative data analyses reveal dispro-
portionate rates of racialethnic minorities in solitary confinement This analysis raises the
stakes for future studies to evaluate comparative prevalence of objective medical diagnoses
and potential causal mechanisms for the physical symptoms specified here and for under-
standing differential use of solitary confinement and its medically harmful sequelae
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 1 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
limited purpose of evaluating patterns of solitary confinement use in the Washington department of corrections If any researchers wish to obtain a similar data file from the Washington department of corrections the authors of this paper would be happy to consult with those researchers about the request and the process for obtaining the data In theory the administrative data file used in this study could be accessed again by future researchers Researchers would need to contact the Washington department of corrections Here is the process and relevant contacts httpswww DocWaGovinformationdataresearch Htmrequests We confirm the authors have no special access privileges others would not have to the data underlying our study beyond patient negotiations with the Washington department of corrections about exactly what data would be shared for what purposes
Funding KR received a Langeloth Grant from the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation https wwwlangelothorg The funders had no role in study design data collection and analysis decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist
Introduction
The health implications of solitary confinement have received increasing attention in recent
years [1 2] Although both the conditions and terms defining solitary confinement are con-
tested the practice generally involves being locked in a cell alone for 22 or more hours per
day with extremely limited access to human contact and communication [3 4] Until recently
however research on the health consequences of solitary confinement has focused almost
entirely on the negative impacts on mental health [4ndash8] While initial studies focused on the
effects of sensory deprivation [9ndash11] recent work has examined the impacts of social depriva-
tions [12 13] Such studies have found that placement in solitary confinement has been associ-
ated with symptoms of increased psychological distress such as anxiety depression paranoia
and aggression [14ndash16] A 2018 study for instance found that prisoners who had spent time
in solitary confinement were three times as likely to exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) than those who had not [17] Some researchers however have argued that
the psychological harms of solitary confinement are limited or unverified [18 19] The analy-
ses on which such opinions rely have in turn been criticized for neglecting existing literature
and for other serious methodological concerns including an inability to isolate exposure to
solitary confinement lack of specificity about variability and comparability in actual condi-
tions of confinement and the inapplicability of psychological assessment scales in the prison
context [1 20]
In a study examining the lived experiences of solitary confinement in Washington state we
too focused on documenting the mental health impacts of the practice through qualitative
interviews with a random sample of 106 prisoners in long-term solitary confinement applica-
tion of a Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment at two points in time with those pris-
oners review of medical health records and analysis of administrative data To our surprise
however we found that after anxiety and depression the third most common significant
health symptoms experienced by our subjects were ldquosomatic concernsrdquo defined by the BPRS
as ldquoconcerns over present bodily healthrdquo [21] This observation led us to examine our data sys-
tematically for evidence of the impacts of solitary confinement on physical health and to con-
sider the implications of such impacts for understanding the health disparities enacted by
solitary confinement and by incarceration more broadly
Existing research on the physical health impacts of incarceration demonstrates the need for
further study of both the medical effects of isolation and its racially disparate impacts espe-
cially considering that there are roughly 80000 people in isolation units nationwide and this
population includes a disproportionate number of racial minorities relative to the overall
prison population [22] Outside of prison health disparities by race and ethnicity are well
attested by existing epidemiologic research [23] Notably Black and other racialethnic minor-
ities consistently show lower life expectancies and worse mental health outcomes than whites
[24ndash27] Health disparities persist and are magnified among the incarcerated population
where people of color are disproportionately represented [28ndash30] In particular people in
prison are at higher risk than the general population for substance use disorders psychiatric
disorders victimization and chronic infectious diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C [31ndash34]
Incarceration has also been shown to exacerbate chronic illnesses such as obesity [35] hyper-
tension and asthma [36 37 29] and formerly incarcerated people experience disparately
adverse health outcomes more generally [38] The interaction between the disparate impacts
of race and incarceration on health mean that mass incarceration itself has been identified as a
social determinant of health for Black men in the United States [39 40]
Solitary confinement amplifies the disproportionately adverse effects of mass incarceration
on people of color Depending on the composition of the prison system Blacks andor Latinos
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 2 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
are often over-represented in solitary confinement relative to their (over)representation in the
general prison population [40ndash44] Any concentrated health disadvantages affecting people in
prison and especially people of color is potentially even more concentrated among those liv-
ing in solitary confinement Moreover existing evidence suggests that conditions of solitary
confinement exacerbate health problems and pose a significant public health risk [45 42]
Studies reporting the physical health impacts of solitary confinement have tended to focus
on issues like self-harm and suicide [46 47 8] One recent study has examined the cardiovas-
cular health burdens of solitary confinement [45] A growing body of neuroscience literature
has examined the effects of solitary confinement on the brains of lab animals documenting
that lab animals in isolated environments have ldquoa decrease in the anatomical complexity of the
brainrdquo compared to those in more enriched environments [48 49] (p70) One recent study
found similar effects in Antarctic expeditioners a shrinking hippocampus hypothesized to be
a result of the isolated and monotonous environment [50] Such neuroscience research has
been used in litigation to argue that there is likely a similar effect on humans imprisoned in
solitary confinement [51 48 49] The associations between solitary confinement self-harm
and lab animalsrsquo brain structure suggest comorbidity between mental health and physical
injury in solitary confinement [1 48]
The physical effects of solitary confinement manifest well beyond release from isolation
and from incarceration overall One recent study has examined post-release mortality (from
all causes including suicide murder and drug overdose) associated with previous time in soli-
tary confinement people who had spent time in solitary confinement in North Carolina
between 2000 and 2015 were 24 more likely to die in their first year after release than former
prisoners who had not spent time in solitary confinement [52] Similarly a 2020 study found
that Danish people who had spent time in solitary confinement had higher mortality within
five years of being released from prison compared to those who never spent time in solitary
confinement [53] This mortality risk associated with solitary confinement exceeds the already
high mortality risk associated with incarceration and release from prison [52ndash54]
In sum while many studies have examined the relationship between incarceration and
health and some studies have examined the relationship between solitary confinement and
mental health the existing literature lacks analysis of disparate physical health outcomes across
levels and severity of confinement [2] especially within isolation and for incarcerated people
of color To our knowledge this article is the first of its kind to consider associations between
solitary confinement and a range of physical health problems and to incorporate explicit con-
sideration of racial health disparities
Methods and materials
To explore the physical health problems experienced in isolation we draw upon a research
study of people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of
Corrections (WADOC) The study consists of four dimensions of participant data 1 surveys
of prisoners in solitary confinement 2 in-depth interviews with a random sample of prisoners
in solitary confinement 3 reviews of the medical (covering mental and physical health) files
as well as the disciplinary records for this subset of prisoners and 4 administrative data for
the entire 2017 prison population provided by the WADOC Data was collected in 2017 and
2018
Setting
WADOC is a mid-sized state prison system with the 12th lowest rate of incarceration of the 50
United States [20] The state and its prison system have a reputation for being progressive
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 3 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
including engaging in reforms to minimize the use of solitary confinement statewide and for
inviting independent academic researchers to evaluate conditions and programs [20 55ndash57]
Five of the statersquos 12 prison facilities have an Intensive Management Unit (IMU) an all-male
unit or building housing people in solitary confinement (with highly restricted access to com-
missary phones radios televisions visitors and roughly 10 hours per week out-of-cell) for
durations ranging from months to years Our study focused on people within the IMUs on
ldquomaximum custody statusrdquo the highest security level assigned to state prisoners housed in the
IMU for an indeterminate period usually following one or more rule violations with return to
the general prison population contingent on meeting specific benchmarks
Participant sampling
First paper surveys were distributed in-person (and collected on the same day) to all 363 peo-
ple on maximum custody status in the five state IMUs in the spring of 2017 Next during the
summer of 2017 roughly one-third (29) of all 363 people on maximum custody status in
IMUs were interviewed selected from randomly ordered lists of the population of each IMU
One year later (2018) all participants from our initial random sample who were still incarcer-
ated one year later including those no longer housed in the IMU were re-interviewed We
also reviewed paper medical and disciplinary files for each consenting year-one interview par-
ticipant Interviews file reviews and observations were conducted over two separate three-
week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team members
Finally we received administrative data on all people within the state prison system as of July
1 2017
Research team training
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and develop the interview instru-
ment Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol for
administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment train-
ing sessions with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Venturamdashin year one and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Dr Ventura conducted an interra-
ter reliability analysis confirming trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or
greater for the BPRS This extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members (9
women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral students (9) with
expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement settings identified
and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being studied and mini-
mized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application of questions
and assessments Eight of the authors on this paper participated in interviews two participated
only in data analysis
Interviews
On site in the Washington State IMUs after the random sample was drawn and willing partici-
pants identified prison staff escorted participants one at a time to a confidential area (moni-
tored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff) Prior to conducting interviews interviewers
informed participants that participation was voluntary and would not involve incentives
administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all informa-
tion shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent security-
related threatrdquo (In the highly restrictive setting of the IMU any incentive beyond providing
human contact and an attentive listener would both run the risk of being an undue influence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 4 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
coercing participation and be administratively prohibited) Participants provided oral consent
to participate in the interview Immediately following interviews interviewers asked partici-
pants whether they consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to partici-
pating in one-year follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all
but two (n = 104) consented in writing to medical file reviews Following interviews interview-
ers reviewed consenting participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of diagnoses prescrip-
tions and substance abuse status WADOC additionally provided electronic administrative
health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as comparable popula-
tion-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
All identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings tran-
scripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible
only through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in
data cleaning and linking The University of California Irvine Office of Research Institutional
Review Board approved this study (HS 2016ndash2816) and the WADOC Research Department
reviewed this approval
Data collection instruments
The initial paper survey of people confined in the WADOC IMU consisted of 36 numbered
questions (each containing a combination of yesno ordinal bubble options and short answer
sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to explain or elaborate on their answers)
about experiences in IMUs conditions of confinement health and well-being and demo-
graphic background drawing from existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [58ndash
62] Survey in S1 Text In all there were 89 substantive items on the survey (excluding demo-
graphic questions) coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU) ordinal (eg
daily weekly monthly describing frequency of interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) vari-
ables In this paper we report on the results of a sub-set of five quantitatively coded items relat-
ing to health from this larger survey This survey functioned as a pilot instrument for the in-
person interviews allowing us to ensure questions were clear and relevant yielding responses
comparable across subjects and institutional contexts and providing our interviewers with a
baseline description of participantsrsquo experiences prior to conducting qualitative interviews
The qualitative interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured questions
(each containing a combination of yesno questions and probing open-ended follow-up ques-
tions) seeking elaboration on responses from the survey questions and also drawing from
existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [60ndash63] including conditions of daily life
(prior to and during isolation) perceived state of physical and mental health access to medical
treatment and experiences with required programming in the IMU among other topics
Interview instrument in S2 Text We first used the instrument at the smallest IMU in Wash-
ington interviewing 15 prisoners and we then revised both the wording and ordering of ques-
tions for maximum clarity and engagement in the remaining 91 interviews we conducted
across the four other IMUs in the state In total 40 of the substantive items on the interview
instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 18 embedded questions designed to
establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg
How much does it cost to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have you noticed any
changes in your health since you have been in this IMU) variables Such questions always
included open-ended follow-up questions (eg Can you describe those changes) Transcribed
responses to those open-ended follow-up questions which related in any way to physical
health constitute the central source of data analyzed in this paper
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 5 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Interviews ranged in length from 45 minutes to three hours Follow-up interviews lasted
between 45 minutes and two hours The condensed year-two instrument contained approxi-
mately 70 questions largely replicating the year-one questions but excluding the background
demographic questions and questions about experiences over time in prison and adjusting
some questions to address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status
As part of both initial and follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psy-
chological assessment both during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following
(for the 10 observational items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech)
the interviews For self-report questions (14 items) embedded in the interview guide inter-
viewers asked about the presence of symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard [20]
Interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier audio recorded (with permis-
sion) professionally transcribed in Microsoft Word translated (in one case from Spanish into
English) by research team members systematically stripped of identifying information and
then systematically checked against the original audio by the original interviewer(s) Interviews
were linked by random identifier to BPRS score sheets (which were scanned and entered into
Microsoft Excel for descriptive statistical analysis) scanned medical file review notes and
WADOC administrative data
Data analysis amp reporting
BPRS and other administrative data were imported into Statistical Package for Social Science
(SPSS) (IBM Armonk NY) and Stata (StataCorp LLC College Station TX) to generate
descriptive statistics including the comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS
items and factors relating to physical health and demographics of the sample interview popula-
tion as compared to the IMU population the overall state prison population and the overall
population of the state itself Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos test were performed to evaluate
the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing location time and raceethnicity chi
square tests of homogeneity were performed to compare racialethnic distributions in the
IMU population the general prison population and the Washington state population The
demographic data utilizes a confidential data file from the WADOC
Transcribed interviews were analyzed using Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software Develop-
ment GmbH Berlin Germany) Six team members who had also conducted interviews
engaged in an iterative and recursive coding process Consistent with the tenets of constructivist
grounded theory coders inductively explored how participants make meaning of their experi-
ences (here their time in solitary confinement) [63 64] This process included initial line-by-
line open-coding of a subset of transcripts which generated a list of 214 codes grouped into 11
major categories (eg Health) with sub-themes (eg physical health) [63] Some of these initial
codes and categories corresponded with specific questions on our interview instrument (most
relevant for the instant analysis question 29 concerned medical ldquokitesrdquo and questions 30 31
and 38 concerned physical health and somatic concerns) However open-ended questions also
yielded responses related to these topics and were so coded Given the constraints of the prison
setting (in-person contact is expensive and time-consuming mail contact is not confidential
because of prison censoring policies) participants have not provided systematic feedback on
their transcripts or our findings However the year-two interviews did give research team mem-
bers an opportunity to discuss year-one themes with participants
All quotations presented in this paper were initially identified in the first phase of our cod-
ing process by one of three (out of our initial 214) codes ldquosomatic concernsrdquo ldquophysical healthrdquo
or ldquokitesrdquo (the standard slang term for a paper form handed to a correctional officer to request
medical attention) Two coders then used intermediate focused coding techniques to
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 6 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
re-code these 319 quotes exploring the relationship between solitary confinement condi-
tions and policies and physical health problems ldquotransform[ing] basic data into more abstract
concepts and allowing the theory to emerge from the datardquo [64 p 5]
Notes from reviewing participantsrsquo paper medical files corroborate details from the qualita-
tive analysis that systematically anchors this data Each participant has been assigned a pseudo-
nym and because we are also exploring the racially disparate impact of the health problems we
identify we specify each quoted participantrsquos self-identified race or ethnicity We linked quota-
tions to specific racialethnic identities only after quotations were selected for inclusion in this
manuscript as representative of the themes we identified in coding
Results
In total 225 prisoners in IMU (62) responded to our in-person survey The refusal rate of
initial interviews was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of prison-
ers [15 58 59 65] The drop-out rate of our sample for the one-year follow-up interviews was
comparable to other studies at 25 there were 4 refusals 21 institutional out-of-state and
parole transfers precluding follow-up and one death [58ndash61] Our random sample of 106 (all-
male) IMU prisoners reflects a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU mean of 5
prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Among our participants 42 were white 12
were African American 23 were Latino 23 were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differ-
ences between our participants and all people held in IMU at the time of our sample People in
the general prison population at the time of our sample are notably different as they are older
less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang-affili-
ated and less likely to be Latino than those held in IMU [20] (We discuss racial differences
across these populations further in the final results sub-section)
Prevalence of somatic concerns
As an initial basis for describing physical symptoms experienced in solitary confinement we
present a quantitative analysis of the prevalence of somatic concerns in our random sample of
106 people held in IMU and the variability of these concerns across time and housing location
In 2017 15 of participants reported having clinically significant (formally defined as a sever-
ity of 4 or higher out of a possible 7) somatic concerns (formally defined as ldquoconcern over pres-
ent bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment [21] In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80
respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 reported clinically signifi-
cant ratings of somatic concern
While ratings of clinically significant somatic concern mostly varied within participants
over time our analysis indicated some persistence of somatic issues across the two assessment
periods Of those who reported clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were
re-interviewed in 2018 (12 respondents 4 were unavailable for re-interview) 25 (3 respon-
dents) indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic issues in 2018 An exact McNe-
marrsquos test revealed no statistically significant relationship between the proportion of
respondents reporting clinically significant somatic concerns in 2017 and 2018 (p = 0 0) In the initial 2017 assessment all study subjects were housed in IMU At the time of re-
interview in 2018 52 respondents had moved into the general prison population while 28
remained in IMU Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 (6 of 28) reported clinically sig-
nificant somatic concerns compared to just 8 of those housed in the general prison popula-
tion (4 of 52) While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
concern in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 confidence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 7 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test) No significant differences were observed in the distribution
of clinically significant somatic concern ratings across racial and ethnic groups
Complementing the BPRS assessment data from the random sample of 106 individuals in
IMU custody survey data collected from the full IMU population in 2017 further indicated the
prevalence of somatic concerns among this population Of the 225 survey respondents 63
expressed health concerns 48 were taking medication 17 had arthritis and 8 had experi-
enced a fall in solitary confinement Importantly for the analysis of emerging symptoms in par-
ticular 82 replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo
while in the IMU These survey results like the BPRS somatic concern results benefit from tri-
angulation with our qualitative data
Specifying physical symptoms
We identify three categories of physical symptoms people experience in solitary confinement
each associated with different aspects of IMU housing symptoms associated with deprivation
conditions symptoms associated with deprivation policies limiting access to healthcare and
chronic musculoskeletal pain exacerbated by the intersection of deprivation conditions and
deprivation policies In each category we analyze how the institution of solitary confinement
shapes both physical health outcomes and perceptions of health for people housed in solitary
confinement revealing both the mechanisms of physical health deterioration and the accentu-
ated comorbidity of physical and mental health in solitary confinement
Deprivation conditions Our participants described a range of physical ailments directly
connected to the conditions of their confinement especially the various deprivations of movement
provisions (from food to toiletries) and human contact inherent in the institutional restrictions
defining solitary confinement Skin irritations and weight fluctuations were the most common of
these participants experienced both as co-morbid with anxiety and other health issues
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They
understood these conditions as being directly associated the poor air and water quality irritat-
ing hygiene products and lack of sun exposure inherent to their conditions of solitary confine-
ment People in the IMU (unlike those in the general prison population) usually cannot
purchase or trade for alternative higher-quality hygiene products their cells have limited nat-
ural light (at best a window far above eye-level at worst no window) and even the exercise
areas frequently have limited natural light Indeed research has documented how isolation can
cause vitamin D deficiency due to lack of natural light exposure [66]
As Joseph (white) explained an ostensibly trivial physical problem like dandruff can
inspire a sense of helplessness in the IMU
Well I try not to [think about] what happens to my body Because yoursquore going to obsess
on it probably Minor things become huge when yoursquore in segregation and so something
that youndashyou as being free in society can alleviate by going to you know to [the store] or
whatever and just get a dandruff shampoo You canrsquot do that here And kiting medical and
telling them ldquoHey I have a severe problem with dermatitis and my headrsquos itching and Irsquove
got bleeding scabs on my headrdquo or whatever the case may be therersquos nothing that we can
do here Yoursquore SOL [shit out of luck]
Josephrsquos inability to treat his skin irritations himself led to both helplessness and obsessive-
ness further exacerbating the discomfort and potential health consequences of the issue This
case illustrates how a free personrsquos flaky skin or minor embarrassment becomes a potentially
severe medical problem in solitary confinement entailing bleeding scabs on the scalp
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 8 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Participants frequently experienced fluctuations in body weight and as with skin irritations
connected these symptoms to conditions inherent to solitary confinement What started as
simple observations about diet exercise and appearance often turned into analyses of the
impact of conditions of confinement on physical as well as mental health Simon (Black) dis-
cussed being ldquoreal worriedrdquo about his weight
The only reason I know theyrsquore not really giving us the calorie needs theyrsquore supposed to
give us is because I feel like Irsquom losing more muscle than I am fat And to lose more muscle
than fat is because yoursquore not getting the nutrients that you need
Not only is weight loss a significant source of anxiety for Simon but he connects the depri-
vations of confinementndashthe lack of nutritious food and sufficient caloriesndashto physical changes
in his body Whether his explanation is correct or simple lack of physical activity is more likely
to explain the changes accurately IMU confinement ostensibly produced the change
Participants also described restricting their own dietary intake beyond the already limited
rations (usually calculated to meet the minimum daily calorie intake standards) for a variety
of reasons from the quality of the food to their emotional state Michael (Latino) described
being suspicious of staff having tampered with his food ldquoI got my breakfast bowl and there
was a tear on the plastic [ ] Sometimes your mind plays tricks on you like theyrsquore trying to
poison you or somethingrdquo While Michael noted that his suspicions were likely just in his
mind Philip (Black) asserted ldquoThey was poisoning my foodndashthey control everything They
can even manipulate the water Irsquom so fucking serious this place is highly technologically
advancedrdquo For those like Michael and Philip psychological states associated with the condi-
tions of confinement (eg suspiciousness paranoia and potentially psychosis) caused them to
restrict their food intake resulting in weight loss Indeed both Michael and Philip had docu-
mented diagnoses of mental illness in their medical files bipolar disorder and undifferentiated
schizophrenia respectively Food restrictions can of course lead to more imminently danger-
ous conditions such as dehydration electrolyte imbalances or renal failurendashnone of which are
likely to be subject to objective evaluation in the IMU as we discuss further in the next sub-
section on the impacts of deprivation policies
Some prisoners made a more direct connection between their mental health their dietary
intake and their physical health For instance Kai (Native American) said
I donrsquot work out because I have a problem breathing This is the first time Irsquove ever done
a program [IMU term] where Irsquove felt like I was breaking Because before Irsquod be working
out Now Irsquom stuck in this Irsquom battling mentally with everything going on Which
affected my body effects my eating sometimes Irsquoll just take the [food] tray but Irsquoll flush the
stuff down the toilet
As Kai suggests in the IMU exercise functions not only as a means to practice physical fit-
ness but also to provide structure for people to manage both their days and the mental strain of
being in isolation When asked a general question like ldquohow are you doing in the IMUrdquo many
participants like Kai referenced whether or not they were engaging in exercise as a way to
gauge how they were faring overall People like Kai shared feelings of lethargy or feeling too
overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day induced by long periods in solitary confine-
ment Their weight fluctuated during these cycles going down with regular and social exercise
routines going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exer-
cise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations high-
light the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 9 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Deprivation policies Our participants described multiple situations in which official
IMU policies and unofficial IMU practices exacerbated their physical ailments especially their
chronic health problems Such policies and practices included the prioritization of security
over care in emergency situations disruptions in care upon transfer into the IMU and over-
whelming administrative hurdles to accessing care in the first place If prisons are largely
unequipped to provide the appropriate care and environment for chronic medical problems
[67 31] our findings reveal both the specific mechanisms by which solitary confinement poli-
cies amplify the usual bureaucratic challenges of accessing healthcare in prison and the kinds
of physical health problems that go unaddressed as a result
First in cases of medical emergencies people housed in the IMU have response buttons in
their cells they can press to alert staff However many of the people we interviewed both
doubted whether staff would respond swiftly enough in an actual emergency and worried
about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response
if medical staff ultimately deemed their problem non-emergent Indeed prisoners perceived
IMU policies as systematically prioritizing incapacitation over medical attention Carl (white)
described an incident where he experienced delayed care and was pepper sprayed after having
suffered from a seizure all because he was unable to comply with orders to stand following the
episode
I had a serious seizure And I was laying on the floor and I had defecated I was laying in a
puddle of puke Well [the guards] had come to the door and I guess they had called med-
ical and they were standing there for 45 minutes yelling ldquoStand up and cuff up so we can
give you medical attentionrdquo They did not pop the door and go in there and give me medical
attention And so unknown to me they popped the cuff port and they sprayed OC [pepper
spray] in there And then they came in They noticed that I was unconscious and finally a
nurse looked at my medical file and shersquos like ldquohersquos epilepticrdquo
In the tense environment of the IMU where staff manage people with histories of violating
prison rules assaulting staff and often serious mental health needs immediate security con-
cerns readily take priority over assessing medical histories and providing healthcare
Second simply being transferred into the IMU often disrupted care in dangerous ways For
instance Julian (Hawaiian) described how when he was transferred into a new solitary con-
finement unit he had to restart the process of seeking treatment for (and even simple acknowl-
edgement of) recurring kidney stones Whereas he had fought and been able to receive x-rays
and medication to help manage his kidney pain at his prior institution he now found this fight
to be futile at his new facility ldquoTheyrsquore just going to take me out of room take me over there to
medical and theyrsquore going to be like oh herersquos the hot water or hot bag or whateverrdquo And
Tony (Native Americanwhite) described a battery of physical and mental health issuesndashan
enlarged prostate a painful cyst that needed to be surgically removed varicose veins ldquochronic
suicidal thoughtsrdquo anxiety and depressionndashall requiring medications which he had difficulty
maintaining access to in the IMU For instance he described how both his Amitriptyline
which partly treated his periodic limb movement sleep disorder and his seizure medication
Dilantin were both discontinued in the IMU resulting in serious injuries to his foot and head
Third a number of bureaucratic hurdles and barriers discouraged people in the IMU from
attempting to access healthcare at all even in potentially life-threatening situations In order to
see a medical professional people isolated in the IMU must fill out a paper request (a ldquokiterdquo)
and hand it to a correctional officer passing by or report a concern to a nurse who makes
daily rounds passing by each cell in the IMU The medical response happens either ldquocellfrontrdquo
with the person talking to the medical professional through his cell door in earshot of others
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 10 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
held in solitary confinement or ldquoby escortrdquo with the person in handcuffs and leg-cuffs if not
also belly chains and a hood usually accompanied by at least two to four correctional officers
to a medical treatment area Vitamins and over-the-counter medications like Tylenol or as-
needed medications like asthma inhalers are kept outside of the cell and available only at spec-
ified times or again by paper kite request Throughout WADOC people must pay $4 for
non-emergency medical care (unless they are indigent in which case WADOC provides care
without a co-pay) but people held in the IMU have more restrictive caps on their overall
spending for any needs including healthcare food and toiletries proportionally raising the
relative cost of seeking care for non-emergency symptoms
These policies in combination with negative perceptions about the quality of care available
to them dissuaded participants from seeking medical services Deon (Black) described new
and unfamiliar ldquobreathing problemsrdquo and rising ldquoblood pressurerdquo in IMU but felt that seeking
medical attention would be useless
Itrsquos pointless for me to knock on the window and ask the nurse ldquoHey nurse do thisrdquo
Because every time I knock on the windowndashit is pointless because the only thing the DOC
wants is money It is money I think people in the cell should be important And itrsquos a
long time but Irsquod just rather wait till I get out
Later in the interview Deon links his rising blood pressure to his isolation ldquoI never had
blood pressure problems until I went to this IMUrdquo Because Deon does not expect to be treated
with care or dignity he avoids medical treatment As a result his new breathing issues and ris-
ing blood pressure went unnoticed by medical staff and Deon did not find out the cause
Blake (white) described experiencing unfamiliar physical health symptoms in the IMU for
which he was also hopeless about receiving any medical assistance
Irsquove been told I have a heart murmur but for like last two weeks Irsquove been feeling my
heart like feeling weird like it flutters once in a while [I] just donrsquot tell nobody because
they wonrsquot do nothing about it unless yoursquore actually having a heart attack or unless you
declare a medical emergency theyrsquoll pull you out take your vitals and then charge you 4
bucks If I have a heart attack or donrsquot have a heart attack it donrsquot matter
Not only did Blake like Deon doubt whether a prison medical provider would believe him
and try to help him but he was further dissuaded from seeking treatment by the $4 institution-
ally-imposed cost for non-emergency treatment Four dollars is arguably worth much more in
prison that it would be even to a destitute person on the outside and worth more still to some-
one in the IMU Under WADOC policy people in IMU are only allowed to spend $10 per
week on store items such as coffee pastries and deodorant The $4 medical fee would absorb
nearly half of this weekly spending cap Blake might have had clinically insignificant subjective
palpitations or the onset of atrial fibrillation following an undiagnosed myocardial infarction
his confinement status rendered clarification functionally unavailable
Like many other participants Deon and Blake expressed a sense of futility about seeking
medical assistance while in the IMU dissuaded by bureaucratic hurdles from perceived dis-
missiveness and indignity (exemplified in the problem of dual loyalty [67]) to actual costs of
care Futility in turn led to non-evaluation of emerging medical problems Still Deon and
Blake expressed a passive acceptance of their situation ldquoitrsquos pointlessrdquo and ldquoit donrsquot matterrdquo
This hopelessness reflects a precarity unique to solitary confinement wondering whether med-
ications would be provided and refills renewed whether the severity of ailments would be
acknowledged and whether medical emergencies would be addressed or instead treated as
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 11 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
security threats As our participantsrsquo experiences suggest solitary confinement carries the
additional punishment of substandard access to health care
Exacerbating musculoskeletal pain Participants spoke frequently about one specific
chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain The experiences of people in
solitary confinement with chronic musculoskeletal pain reveal how the prior two categories of
symptoms we analyze those associated with deprivation conditions and those associated with
deprivation policies in solitary confinement interact to exacerbate physical health problems
While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical
injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated
and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to
them in solitary confinement
For instance Victor (Latino) described his frustrations with attempts to get care let alone
relief from the pain of his sciatica
Irsquove been told I have nothing wrong with me but I have been hurt and they took x-rays of
my back and they found that the disks are in there or something thatrsquos triggering some
nerves And I still got a little bit of time left and they just opened up an Ibuprofen right
now And that stuff doesnrsquot work So what can you do
Victorrsquos medical file highlights persistence of chronic pain in his back and hips and notes
that he avoided sitting down for longer than 5ndash10 minutes Not only did participants describe
untreated pain but they described the anxiety associated with the lack of treatment Isaac
(BlackLatino) described how he experienced both quad and hamstring pain in the IMU and
how this escalated his physical health concerns ldquoIrsquoll start thinking like oh Irsquom laying in bed
too much Maybe my muscles are starting to rot you know eating on themselvesrdquo In a similar
sentiment Tim (white) stated ldquoMy body is likendashI canrsquot explain it Like my skeleton feels like
my skeletonrsquos broken or somethingrdquo While Victor must bear persistent pain and the anxiety
that he will likely have to continue to suffer Isaac and Timrsquos experiences are more reflective of
somatization or the expression of psychological distress through physical symptoms [69]
These participants highlight the complex comorbidity between musculoskeletal pain and men-
tal health in isolation an inverse experience of physical pain Tyler (white) discussing his sco-
liosis made a direct connection between his untreated pain and his mental health ldquoMental
health and things that go through your head just because of this when you got pain shooting
up into your brain and you guys arenrsquot fixing itrdquo
Pain and anxiety in turn interfered with other aspects of IMU existence Craig (white)
described how an untreated knee injury was causing him ldquomoderate to severe painrdquo in combi-
nation with anxiety about how he would re-enter society when released directly from solitary
confinement together these experiences interfered with his everyday activities including his
ability to communicate with his family ldquoI was in the middle of actually writing my mom a let-
ter and I was going to tell her about you know they still havenrsquot done anything with my
knee I couldnrsquot write the letter anymore I just got so mad I was so mad I really couldnrsquot
even focus on anythingrdquo Craigrsquos medical file affirms his complaint documenting knee swell-
ing and chronic extension tendonitis but also indicating no abnormalities were found
People living in solitary confinement are left with very few options to effectively manage
persistent pain which appears to foster more maladaptive behavior such as rumination stress
and despair within a highly restrictive and stimuli-depleted environment [68ndash71] Along with
bearing the institutional monotony medical precariousness and procedural strictures of soli-
tary confinement onersquos own body becomes a challenge to withstand [72 73]
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 12 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
RacialEthnic disproportionalities
We now turn to reporting the race and ethnic disparities in the Washington state prison popu-
lation overall (compared to the statewide adult population) and in solitary confinement spe-
cifically (compared to the general prison population) These disparities suggest that the
various mechanisms by which solitary confinement impacts health and well-being are likely to
be disproportionately experienced across race and ethnic lines
We analyze administrative data provided by WADOC and Census Bureau population esti-
mates Black non-Latino individuals represented only 37 of adults in Washington state in
2017 but they comprised 179 of the general prison population [74] Similarly Latino indi-
viduals represented 103 of the statewide adult population but 136 of the prison popula-
tion Conversely both White non-Latinos and AsianPacific Islanders Native Americans and
mixed-race individuals (grouped within ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo) were somewhat under-repre-
sented in the general prison population relative to the statewide adult population (see Fig 1)
Differences in racial and ethnic composition of the general prison population and the state-
wide adult population are statistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Within prison walls we find evidence of further racial and ethnic disproportionalities in
housing placement Comparing those housed in restrictive IMU confinement to those housed
in the general population we find that prisoners who self-identify as ldquoLatino Any Racerdquo and
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo ethnicity are over-represented in IMU To characterize the scale of differ-
ences in the racialethnic composition of the IMU and general prison populations we calcu-
lated disproportionality or prevalence ratios as the proportion of each racialethnic group in a
given population divided by the proportion of that racialethnic group in the reference popu-
lation Here Latinos are over-represented within the IMU participant group by a factor of 17
relative to their representation in the general prison population and those grouped in the
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo category are over-represented in the IMU sample by a factor of 26 relative
to the general prison population Conversely White non-Latino individuals are under-repre-
sented in the IMU sample relative to the general prison population Likewise and in contrast
to the gross disproportionality documented in the general prison population Black non-
Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample relative to the gen-
eral prison population 113 of the IMU sample identified as Black non-Latino compared
with 179 of the general prison population The difference in the racial and ethnic composi-
tion of those in long-term solitary confinement compared with the general population was sta-
tistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Discussion
A popular analogy likens prison to a chronic illness it disrupts daily life interrupts routines
[72] spreads risk like a contagious disease [75] and models like an epidemiological problem
[76 30] While the study of the physical effects of incarceration has developed over the last
decade there is a serious gap in the literature in understanding the experiences and outcomes
of physical health in isolation We are just beginning to understand the medical correlates of
solitary confinement their comorbidity with mental health and overall implications for pris-
onersrsquo suffering [72] Integrating surveys interviews BPRS scores medical and disciplinary
file reviews and administrative data the scale and array of our research represents one of the
more robust studies of solitary confinement to date [20] The multi-method research presented
here offers a first step not only towards understanding some typical medical problems of soli-
tary confinement but also towards understanding the analytical challenges of an environment
in which physical and psychological problems are immediately concomitant and objective
clarification is often unavailable
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 13 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Fig 1 Racial and ethnic composition of IMU sample general prison population and Washington State 2017 US Census Bureau
Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and
States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun dagger Authorsrsquo calculations The total prison population file included 17943 individuals in
DOC prison custody on July 1 2017 For comparison purposes the ldquogeneral prison populationrdquo excludes those returned to prison on
violations of release or sentence conditions those in an IMU unit on the index date and those on a maximum custody status (n = 1970)
as well as those in the IMU sample (n = 106) Dagger No significant differences in racialethnic composition were found between the IMU
sample and larger IMU population on the index date using raceethnicity data from DOC These data reflect self-reported raceethnicity
during participant interviews ^ OtherUnknown includes individuals of two or more races AsianPacific Islander Native American
Alaska Native and unknown raceethnicity information
httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510g001
We find that solitary confinement constitutes not just a mental but also a physical health
risk It exacerbates well-documented physical health ldquosymptomsrdquo of incarceration from dis-
ruptions of daily life and routines to undiagnosed untreated or mis-treated ailments [1 30
38] These initial symptoms in turn produce other risks to the extent respondents are accu-
rately reporting weight fluctuations in solitary confinement this physical symptom has detri-
mental health implications weight fluctuation itself is associated with adverse cardiovascular
and psychological outcomes [77 78] Likewise musculoskeletal pain increases multimorbidity
and its sequelae are tightly unified in their impact on disability [79]
These health concerns likely have a grossly disparate impact on communities of color just
as incarceration is a health stratifying institution for prisoners their families and communi-
ties so too does solitary confinement appear to exacerbate racial health inequities While we
find that Black non-Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample
relative to the general prison population we find that Latino and OtherMixed Race prisoners
are disproportionately over-represented in solitary confinement in WADOC just as other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 14 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
studies have documented disproportionately high representations of racial and ethnic minori-
ties in other statesrsquo uses of solitary confinement [22 41 43] We further find that prisoners of
all races describe similar physical health challenges and complaints while in solitary confine-
ment In sum people of color face a disproportionate risk of being placed in solitary confine-
ment such racial disparities in turn mean that the physical health symptoms associated with
or possibly caused by these conditions of confinement are likely to fall disproportionately on
certain groups Though we do not explore other risk factors for over-representation in solitary
confinement in this paper we and others have documented serious mental illness [20 80]
transgender identification [81] and pregnant women [82] as particularly vulnerable to both
incarceration and solitary confinement suggesting additional sub-groups who might face dis-
proportionate and unique risks of physical health problems in solitary confinement
If anything the evidence we present here understates the prevalence and intensity of the symp-
toms we document First Washington State is a progressive system actively engaged in both limit-
ing the application and the duration of solitary confinement and developing measures to mitigate
its harmful effects from better mental health training for correctional staff to more sustained
group contact for prisoners in IMUs conditions and their physical effects are undoubtedly
worse in many if not most other states [20 42 44] Second the BPRS somatic concerns scores
we present focus on the two weeks prior to assessment so likely underrepresent the cumulative
incidence of somatic concerns in the study sample over time Third our exceptionally large ran-
dom sample size for an in-depth mixed methods study of a solitary confinement population was
still not powered to establish statistically significant differences between interview subjects in the
IMU in year one (2017) and those out of the IMU in year two (2018)ndashotherwise important com-
parison groups for understanding differences in either somatic concerns measures or physical
symptom specifications Fourth both the Washington state population and state prison popula-
tion have proportionately more white people than some other states and prisons where racial dis-
parities in both prison and solitary confinement may be even more significant
While our findings do not establish either how prevalent the symptoms and mechanisms of
suffering we specified are among people in solitary confinement as compared to the general
prison population or whether solitary confinement in fact directly causes these symptoms
recent research suggests that at least some of the symptoms our respondents reported like
hypertension are significantly associated with long-term isolation [83 45] Although the evi-
dence is clear that solitary confinement poses serious health risks [54 45] our research high-
lights the importance of continuing to document and analyze these risks especially from a
multi-method perspective triangulating administrative population-level data with objective
scales like the BPRS subjective descriptions of experiences from surveys and interviews and
corroboration from medical file reviews
First documenting physical health problems provides a critical means to elucidate the sever-
ity of deprivations in treatment environmental conditions and exercise and nutrition [84 85]
inherent in solitary confinement If incarceration is experienced fundamentally through control
and restriction of the body this is all the more true in solitary confinement where prisoners are
subjected to extreme forms of control while being entirely reliant on others for accessing basic
necessities from food to healthcare Our participants experienced the deprivations of solitary
confinement as exacerbating their health problems which shaped their health experiences as
punitive Otherwise medically trivial conditions quickly become grave in solitary ldquodandruffrdquo
can become a bleeding scalp wound a four-dollar co-payment blurs the difference between sub-
jective palpitations and an unstable arrhythmia and unused muscles ldquorotrdquo Physical suffering
reveals itself to be a crucial dimension of experience in solitary confinement
Second to the extent physical symptoms in particular are more familiar more readily
labeled and less stigmatized than mental health issues they may provide a window into other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 15 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
less physically tangible pains of confinement in solitary or elsewhere [84 85] The visuality of
spectacular forms of suffering in carceral institutions is only made possible by and through
mundane phenomenon that our participants elucidate through their discussions of everyday
physical experiences [86] Indeed attending to peoplersquos physical health in solitary confinement
reveals the irreducible relationship between the body mental health and highly restrictive
conditions of confinement Whether they exercise to the point of physical debilitation to keep
their minds busy refuse to eat because they do not trust their food is safe or avoid medical
care out of a hopelessness of being treated with dignity the physical and psychological are inti-
mately bounded in peoplersquos experiences in prison Examining physical suffering in solitary
confinement then becomes a tool for understanding suffering in prison more broadly and
especially the comorbidity of physical and mental suffering
Third the challenges we document in identifying and specifying physical symptoms in soli-
tary confinement reveal not just the interrelationship between symptoms conditions and poli-
cies but institutional mechanisms exacerbating both the identification and treatment of
physical problems in prison In many cases our respondents had no hope of establishing what
was physically wrong with them let alone whether the conditions of their confinement caused
the physical ailments because they either could not get or avoided medical treatment While
both community standard and continuity of care is an issue in prison generally [67] solitary
confinement widens these service gaps The phenomenon of dual loyalty which describes how
the patient-provider relationship within prison can be subsumed by correctional directives of
control and mistrust of incarcerated people [67] is acutely relevant in the context of solitary
confinement where both control and mistrust are especially prevalent [87 88]
In sum examining solitary confinement and documenting its affects provides an important
magnifying lens for understanding prison and its affects more broadly not only in elucidating
the mechanisms of harm but also in developing responses to mitigate these harms Ninety-five
percent or more of all prisoners will eventually return home to our communities [4 5] and
many will have spent time in solitary confinement Nearly one-in-five people in prison spends
time in solitary confinement each year and one-in-ten spends 30 days or more in these condi-
tions [3] These numbers will only increase in the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic
which has justified facility-wide ldquolockdownsrdquo imposing restrictions similar to those in soli-
tary-confinement in prisons across the United States as well as actual solitary confinement
placements for infected and exposed prisoners [89] To the extent that solitary confinement
undercuts treatment and care in and beyond prison it undermines the public health of those
incarcerated and those returning to our communities
Supporting information
S1 Text IMU survey
(PDF)
S2 Text Interview instrument
(DOC)
S1 Checklist Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ) 32-item
checklist
(DOCX)
S1 Quotations
(DOCX)
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 16 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Author Contributions
Conceptualization Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter
Formal analysis Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Methodology Justin D Strong Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Project administration Justin D Strong
Writing ndash original draft Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca
Tublitz Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie
Pifer Thomas R Blair
Writing ndash review amp editing Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Dallas Augustine Melissa Bar-
ragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie Pifer Thomas R Blair
References
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4 Administrators Association of State Correctional Administrators Yale Law School Arthur Liman Public
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7 Grassian S Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Wash UJL amp Polrsquoy 2006 22325ndash84
8 Kupers TA What to do with the survivors Coping with the long-term effects of isolated confinement
Crim Justice Behav 2008 Aug 35(8)1005ndash16
9 Griffin E Breaking menrsquos minds Behavior control and human experimentation at the federal prison in
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PLOS ONE The body in isolation
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30 Wildeman C Wang EA Mass incarceration public health and widening inequality in the USA Lancet
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N Engl J Med 2011 Jun 2 364(22)2081ndash83 httpsdoiorg101056NEJMp1102385 PMID 21631319
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of health for Black men in the United States Sociol Compass 2018 Mar 12(3)e12566
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ing DC (US) National Institute of Justice 2018 21 p Report No 252062
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42 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States
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43 Schlanger M Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial disparities
Mich J Race amp L 2012 18(1)241ndash50
44 Reiter KA Parole snitch or die Californiarsquos supermax prisons and prisoners 1997ndash2007 Punishm
Soc 2012 Dec 14(5)530ndash63
45 Williams BA Li A Ahalt C Coxson P Kahn JG Bibbins-Domingo K The cardiovascular health burdens
of solitary confinement J Gen Intern Med 2019 Oct 1 34(10)1977ndash80 httpsdoiorg101007
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46 Dye MH Deprivation importation and prison suicide combined effects of institutional conditions and
inmate composition J Crim Justice 2010 Jul 1 38(4)796ndash806
47 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S Hadler J Lee D Alper H et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-
harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014 Mar 104(3)442ndash7 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH
2013301742 PMID 24521238
48 Lobel J Akil H Law amp neuroscience The case of solitary confinement Daedalus 2018 Oct1 47(4)61ndash75
49 Zigmond MJ Smeyne RJ Use of animals to study the neurobiological effects of isolation In Lobel J
Smith PS editors Solitary confinement Effects practices and pathways toward reform New York
Oxford University Press 2020 [cited 2020 Jul 14] Chapter 13
50 Stahn AC Gunga HC Kohlberg E Gallinat J Dinges DF Kuhn S Brain changes in response to long
Antarctic expeditions N Engl J Med 2019 Dec 5 381(23)2273ndash5 httpsdoiorg101056
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51 Smith DG Neuroscientists make a case against solitary confinement prolonged social isolation can do
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52 Ranapurwala SI Shanahan ME Alexandridis AA Proescholdbell SK Naumann RB Edwards D Jr
et al Opioid overdose mortality among former North Carolina inmates 2000ndash2015 Am J Public Health
2018 Sep 108(9)1207ndash13 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2018304514 PMID 30024795
53 Wildeman C Andersen LH Solitary confinement placement and post-release mortality risk among for-
merly incarcerated individuals a population-based study Lancet Public Health 2020 Feb 1 5(2)e107ndash
13 httpsdoiorg101016S2468-2667(19)30271-3 PMID 32032555
54 Brinkley-Rubinstein L Sivaraman J Rosen DL Cloud DH Junker G Proescholdbell S et al Associa-
tion of restrictive housing during incarceration with mortality after release JAMA Netw Open 2019 Oct
2 2(10)e1912516 Available from httpsjamanetworkcomjournalsjamanetworkopenarticle-
abstract2752350 httpsdoiorg101001jamanetworkopen201912516 PMID 31584680
55 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional populations in the United States 2016 Washington DC Depart-
ment of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 14 p Report No NCJ
251211
56 Phipps PA Gagliardi GJ Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and ser-
vices Interim Report Olympia WA Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 May 37 p
Report No 03-05-1901
57 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J of Public Health 2005 Oct 95
(10)1692ndash5
58 Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates Santa Monica CA The
Rand Corporation 1982 Nov Report No N-1635-NIJ
59 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berke-
ley CA University of California Press 2014
60 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up meth-
ods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs 2009 Sep 70
(5)751ndash61 httpsdoiorg1015288jsad200970751 PMID 19737500
61 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach popula-
tion Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2016 May 17 113(20)5477ndash85
62 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation
and normalization in Danish prisons Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
63 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis Thousand
Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
64 Chun Tie Y Birks M Francis K Grounded theory research A design framework for novice researchers
SAGE open medicine 2019 Jan 71ndash8
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65 Berzofsky M and Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) Sample Design Evaluation and Rec-
ommendations Washington DC US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017
66 Nwosu BU Maranda L Berry R Colocino B Flores CD Sr Folkman K et al The vitamin D status of
prison inmates PloS one 2014 Mar 5 9(3)e90623 httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0090623
PMID 24598840
67 Pont J Enggist S Stover H Williams B Greifinger R Wolff H Prison health care governance guaran-
teeing clinical independence American journal of public health 2018 Apr 108(4)472ndash6 httpsdoiorg
102105AJPH2017304248 PMID 29470125
68 Brosschot JF Gerin W Thayer JF The perseverative cognition hypothesis A review of worry pro-
longed stress-related physiological activation and health Journal of psychosomatic research 2006
Feb 1 60(2)113ndash24 httpsdoiorg101016jjpsychores200506074 PMID 16439263
69 Stemmet L Roger D Kuntz J Borrill J Ruminating about the past or ruminating about the futuremdash
which has the bigger impact on health An exploratory study Current Psychology 2018 Jan 13 1ndash7
70 Laws B Crewe B Emotion regulation among male prisoners Theoretical Criminology 2016 Nov 20
(4)529ndash47
71 Greer K Walking an emotional tightrope Managing emotions in a womenrsquos prison Symbolic Interac-
tion 2002 Feb 25(1)117ndash39
72 Choudhry K Armstrong D Dregan A Prisons and Embodiment Self-Management Strategies of an
Incarcerated Population Journal of Correctional Health Care 2019 Oct 25(4)338ndash50 httpsdoiorg
1011771078345819880240 PMID 31722608
73 Western B Homeward Life in the year after prison Russell Sage Foundation 2018 May 4
74 US Census Bureau Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age
Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun
75 Lum K Swarup S Eubank S Hawdon J The contagious nature of imprisonment an agent-based
model to explain racial disparities in incarceration rates Journal of the Royal Society Interface 2014
Sep 6 11(98)20140409
76 Dumont DM Brockmann B Dickman S Alexander N Rich JD Public health and the epidemic of incar-
ceration Annual review of public health 2012 Apr 21 33325ndash39 httpsdoiorg101146annurev-
publhealth-031811-124614 PMID 22224880
77 Zhang Y Hou F Li J Yu H Li L Hu S et al The association between weight fluctuation and all-cause
mortality A systematic review and meta-analysis Medicine 2019 Oct 98(42)
78 Soslashrensen TI Rissanen A Korkeila M Kaprio J Intention to lose weight weight changes and 18-y mor-
tality in overweight individuals without co-morbidities PLoS medicine 2005 Jun 28 2(6)e171 https
doiorg101371journalpmed0020171 PMID 15971946
79 Blyth FM Briggs AM Schneider CH Hoy DG March LM The global burden of musculoskeletal painmdash
where to from here American journal of public health 2019 Jan 01 09(1)35ndash40
80 Patler C Sacha JO Branic N The black box within a black box Solitary confinement practices in a sub-
set of US immigrant detention facilities Journal of Population Research 2018 Dec 354 httpsdoi
org101007s12546-018-9209-8
81 Andasheva F Arenrsquot I a Woman Deconstructing Sex Discrimination and Freeing Transgender Women
from Solitary Confinement FIU L Rev 2016 12117
82 Knittel AK Resolving health disparities for women involved in the criminal justice system North Carolina
medical journal 2019 Nov 01 80(6)363ndash6 httpsdoiorg1018043ncm806363 PMID 31685574
83 Hawkley Test Ashker v Governor of California No 409-cv-05796-CW (ND California 2015)
84 Sexton L Penal subjectivities Developing a theoretical framework for penal consciousness Punish-
ment amp Society 2015 Jan 17(1)114ndash36
85 Crewe B Warr J Bennett P Smith A The emotional geography of prison life Theoretical Criminology
2014 Feb 18(1)56ndash74
86 Corcoran MS Spectacular suffering Transgressive performance in penal activism Theoretical Crimi-
nology 2019 Jan 11 httpsdoiorg1011771362480618819796
87 Glowa-Kollisch S Graves J Dickey N MacDonald R Rosner Z Waters A et al Data- driven human
rights using dual loyalty trainings to promote the care of vulnerable patients in jail Health Hum Rights
2015 Jun 1 17(1)124ndash35
88 Blair TR Reiter KA Letter to the editor and author response Solitary confinement and mental illness
Perspectives 2015 Jul 2
89 Cloud D Augustine D Ahalt C Williams B The ethical use of medical isolationndashnot solitary confine-
mentndashto reduce COVID-19 transmission in correctional settings AMEND 2020 April
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 20 20
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE
See next page
112
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
Psychological Distress in Solitary Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018
Keramet Reiter PhD JD Joseph Ventura PhD David Lovell PhD MSW Dallas Augustine MA Melissa Barragan MA Thomas Blair MD MS Kelsie Chesnut MA Pasha Dashtgard MA EdM Gabriela Gonzalez MA Natalie Pifer PhD JD and Justin Strong MA
Objectives To specify symptoms and measure prevalence of psychological distress among incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement
Methods We gathered data via semistructured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric
Rating Scale (BPRS) assessments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for 106 randomly selected people in solitary confinement in the Washington State
Department of Corrections in 2017 We performed 1-year follow-up interviews
and BPRS assessments with 80 of these incarcerated people and we present the
results of our qualitative content analysis and descriptive statistics Results BPRS results showed clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety or
guilt among half of our research sample Administrative data showed disproportionately
high rates of serious mental illness and self-harming behavior compared with general prison populations Interview content analysis revealed additional symptoms including
social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity Conclusions Our coordinated study of rating scale interview and administrative data
illustrates the public health crisis of solitary confinement Because 95 or more of all incarcerated people including those who experienced solitary confinement are even-tually released understanding disproportionate psychopathology matters for de-veloping prevention policies and addressing the unique needs of people who have
experienced solitary confinement an extreme element of mass incarceration (Am J
Public Health 2020110S56ndashS62 doi102105AJPH2019305375)
few procedural protections limited available alternative responses and no external over-sight2 Researchers and policymakers are therefore limited not only in access to data and populations but also by these populationsrsquo fluidity
A standard instrument for assessing psy-chological impacts of incarceration is the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) Originally developed to rate the severity of symptoms in hospitalized psychiatric patients and track changes in status over time1314 the BPRS is increasingly used for research within carceral settings12151617 The current scale assesses 24 observable or self-reported symptoms Extensive research on the BPRSrsquos reliability and validity confirms its efficacy in identify-ing indicators of serious mental illness14
In Washington State interviewers ad-ministered the BPRS to a random sample of 87 incarcerated people during qualitative interviews (and also conducted 122 medical chart reviews)1915 concluding that solitary confinement reveals ldquoa concentration of some of the most important negative effects of the entire prison complexrdquo1(p1692) In a widely cited subsequent study in Colorado the BPRS was included in a battery of tests designed to measure psychological ldquocon-structsrdquo associated with solitary confinement (for 270 matched participants) but generated
Long-term solitary confinement expanded across the United States in the 1980s by
1997 nearly every state had built a ldquosuper-maxrdquo creating an estimated total of 20 000 new solitary cells12 Human rights agencies characterize the practice as torture34 policy analysts criticize it as expensive and ineffec-tive24 Yet the epidemiological basis for understanding solitary confinement is weak Current estimates of the annual US solitary confinement population vary from 80 000 to 250 00056 Likewise the conditions (how much isolation with how few privileges) purposes (discipline protection or institu-tional security) and labels (administrative segregation supermax restrictive housing intensive management) defining solitary confinement are contested256 Many studies document psychological harms of
S56 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al
segregation including associations between solitary confinement and self-harm anxiety depression paranoia and aggression among other symptoms7ndash9 but other recent find-ings suggest that psychological impacts are limited10ndash12 Correctional officials use solitary confinement at their discretion often with
ABOUT THE AUTHORS Keramet Reiter is with the Department of Criminology Law and Society and the School of Law University of California Irvine Joseph Ventura is with the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles David Lovell is with the School of Nursing University of Washington Seattle Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut and Gabriela Gonzalez are doctoral candidates in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Thomas Blair is with the Department of Psychiatry Southern California Permanente Medical Group Downey Pasha Dashtgard is a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological Science University of California Irvine Natalie Pifer is with the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice University of Rhode Island Kingston Justin Strong is a doctoral student in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine
Correspondence should be sent to Keramet Reiter 3373 Social Ecology II Irvine CA 92697 (e-mail reiterkuciedu) Reprints can be ordered at httpwwwajphorg by clicking the ldquoReprintsrdquo link
This article was accepted September 5 2019 doi 102105AJPH2019305375
AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
few reliable results The study relied on a pencil-and-paper test the Brief Symptom Inventory ldquoa 53-item self-report measure to assess a broad range of psychological symptomsrdquo and concluded that people in solitary confinement sometimes experienced improvements in their psychological well-being and those with mental illnesses did not deteriorate over time11(p52)
Our study builds on these investigations relying not only on psychometric instruments but also on mental and physical health and dis-ciplinary records and in-depth interview data to assess the psychological well-being of 106 ran-domly sampled incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections (WADOC) from 2017 to 2018 Triangulation of sources gives this study a robust basis for understanding the psy-chological effects of solitary confinement
METHODS WADOC is a midsized (39th highest rate
of incarceration in the United States) fully state-funded correctional system with a long history of inviting academic researchers to independently evaluate carceral practice191819
Fieldwork was conducted over 2 separate 3-week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team mem-bers (9 women and 4 men) all affiliated with the University of California Irvine In total 106 incarcerated people were inter-viewed in 2017 and 80 incarcerated people were reinterviewed in 2018 We also collected medical and disciplinary data including serious mental illness (SMI) and self-harm data
Sample and Data Collections WADOC has 5 geographically dispersed
intensive management units (IMUs) people in these all-male units have usually violated an in-prison rule and are in solitary confinement for durations ranging from months to years with highly restricted access to phones radios televisions time out of cell and visitors As a result of WADOC efforts to reform and re-duce IMU use the population in these units fluctuated with a high of more than 600 (in 2011) to a low of 286 incarcerated people (in 2015) on ldquomaximum custodyrdquo status for indeterminate terms contingent on meeting
specific benchmarks20 In 2017 when the initial sample for this research was drawn there were 363 maximum custody status people assigned to the IMU
We selected participants from a randomly ordered list in proportion to the population of each IMU accounting for 29 of the total population in each of the 5 units For recruitment and consent processes see Ap-pendix A (available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg) The interview refusal rate was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people921
The 96-question semistructured interview instrument included a range of questions used in previous studies on incarcerated peoplersquos experiences2223 covering condi-tions of daily life physical and mental health treatment and IMU programming BPRS self-report items were embedded throughout the interview we evaluated observational items immediately following each in-terview24 Interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 3 hours
Following interviews participants were given an option to consent to medical file reviews and to participate in 1-year follow-up interviews All participants consented to rein-terviews and all but 2 participants (n = 104) consented to medical file reviews Following year-1 interviews WADOC provided elec-tronic administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants (along with comparable population-level data for the prison system in 2017)
In summer 2018 the research team returned to Washington and reconsented and reinterviewed every available participant mdashnotably including those no longer housed in the IMUmdashfor a total of 80 reinterviews Because of refusals (n = 4) institutional trans-fers and parole (n = 21) and 1 death we were unable to follow-up with 26 respondents (25) This drop-out rate is low compared with similar studies2526 Follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 2 hours The condensed year-2 instrument contained ap-proximately 70 questions with variation by current housing status
For the steps taken to protect vulnerable imprisoned research participants and details of the training research team members com-pleted establishing high interrater reliability in administering the BPRS24 see Appendix A
(available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg)
Data Analysis All interviews were assigned a randomly
generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed in Microsoft Word (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details (names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software De-velopment GmbH Berlin Germany) for analysis See Appendix A for an explanation of the thematically grounded open-coding process27 We entered all BPRS paper rating sheets completed following year-1 and year-2 interviews into Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) We linked each participantrsquos BPRS rating by random identifier to extracted data from qualitative interviews medical file reviews and administrative data from WADOC
Relevant variables extracted from ad-ministrative health data included SMI a critical classification because it implies that treatment is medically necessary and there-fore is an obligation of the prison system while the person is under its care WADOC operationally defines SMI by standardized criteria combining diagnosis medication and frequency of psychiatric encounters and history of suicide attempts or other self-harm
We then imported BPRS and other administrative data into SPSS version 26 (IBM Armonk NY) to generate descriptive statistics including prevalence of clinically significant ratings on BPRS items and factors (subscales of co-occurring symptom groups) including positive symptoms (un-usual thought content hallucinations con-ceptual disorganization) negative symptoms (blunted affect emotional withdrawal motor retardation) depression-anxiety-guilt symptoms (including somatic concerns DAGS) and mania (excitability elevated mood hyperactivity distractibility)14 We ran correlational analyses (cross-tabs and t test) to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings and other independent assess-ments of well-being such as existing diagnosis of SMI
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S57
mdash
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
RESULTS See Table 1 for summary characteristics of
the all-male participant population (there are
TABLE 1 Characteristics of Sample of People in Solitary Confinement Compared With General Prison Population Washington State Department of Corrections 2017
no women in IMUs in WADOC) and the IMU Population (n = 106) General Population (n = 16 465)a
general WADOC population As in other Age y studies of solitarily confined incarcerated Mean 35 40 people6 our sample was generally younger Median 34 38 more violent (in terms of criminal history) and Range 20ndash65 18ndash94 serving longer sentences than those in the general population Latinos and gang affiliates are both overrepresented in our IMU sample likely because of the salience of conflicts among rival Latino factions as an institutional security concern2 Although our IMU par-ticipants differed from the general prison population there were no significant differences in either demographic variables or criminal history characteristics between our random
Raceethnicity (no)
White
African American
Latino
Other
IMU length of stay
Mean
Median
Range
42 (44)
12 (12)
23 (24)
23 (24)
145 mo
6 mo
lt 1 wkndash151 mo
59 (9746)
18 (2935)
14 (2276)
9 (1508)
sample and the overall IMU population Current offense category (no)
except that our participant pool was slightly Murder and manslaughter 17 (18) 16 (2623)
older than the overall IMU population Sex offenses 12 (13) 19 (3195)
Robbery and assault 57 (60) 34 (5608)
Property offenses 8 (9) 18 (2933) Range and Prevalence of Drugs or other 6 (6) 13 (2106)
Psychological Symptoms Identified Prison convictionsb
Our initial sample of 106 participants had a Mean 5 4 mean BPRS rating of 37 and a median rating Median 4 3 of 33 (possible range from 24 to 168) sug- Range 1ndash18 1ndash27 gesting mild psychiatric symptoms among the study population at the time of our inter-views14 However analysis of individual scale items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms (Table 2) Further analysis of BPRS factors as opposed to individual items provided
Prison length of stay mo
Mean
Median
Range
Ever in prison gangc (no)
Yes
No
Missing
103
72
3ndash456
60 (64)
36 (38)
4 (4)
97
45
2ndash600
32 (5410)
68 (11 659)
additional evidence of clinically significant Serious mental illnessd (no) 19 (16) 9 (1589)
psychiatric distress in as much as half of the Self-harm attempte (no) 18 (17) Not available population sampled (ie DAGS factor Suicide attempte (no) 22 (22) Not available Table 2)
Administrative data support the finding Note IMU = intensive management unit
of long-term psychological distress Among aGeneral population data excludes 761 categories returned to prison for techn
nonsentenced and 718 resentencical violations of conditions on un
ed incarcerated people Both derlying drug or sex offenses
our respondents 19 had SMI designations a politically selective and narrow set of offenses that would distort the general population primary
22 had a documented suicide attempt and offense profile
18 had documentation of other self-harm bNumber of convictions to prison excluding out-of-state convictions often significant for IMU residents
all at some point during their incarceration cGang status was self-reported Figure is calculated from 102 respondents
ided for 85 respondents figure i
who disclosed this information
either before or during their time in the IMU dSerious mental illness data were prov s calculated from this sample
(Table 1) Moreover respondents with SMI eSelf-harm and suicide data were provided for 94 respondents figure is calculated from this sample
designations were much more likely to re-port positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms Qualitative interview data revealed and will be considered exhaustively in sub-than non-SMI respondents (Table 3) These symptoms not otherwise captured by the sequent analyses) Two classes of symptoms
ndentsfindings support the validity of the BPRS BPRS and medical files (Such data will be were reported by a majority of respoassessments used illustratively here for reasons of space descriptions of the severity of the emotional
S58 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
mdash
ndash
mdash
ndash
TABLE 2 Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Symptom and Factor Prevalence Washington State Department of Corrections 2017 2018
IMU 2017 (n = 106) (No) IMU 2018 (n = 28) (No) Non-IMU 2018 (n = 52) (No)
Symptomsa
Depression 2450 (26)
Anxiety 2450 (26)
Somatic concern 1510 (16)
Guilt 1790 (19)
Hostility 1130 (12)
Hallucinations 940 (10)
Excitement 1040 (11)
2500 (7) 1538 (8)
3214 (9) 2885 (15)
2143 (6) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 1731 (9)
1429 (4) 1154 (6)
1429 (4) 769 (4)
Factorsb
Positive 1600 (17) 1786 (5) 1154 (6) stitution taking over their identity
Negative 470 (5) 0 (0) 192 (1) Irsquove been in the hole so long that it defines the DAGS 4910 (52) 5357 (15) 3654 (19) person If yoursquove been in the box for so long you Mania 1700 (18) 1481 (4) 1731 (9) canrsquot play well with others Wersquore so confined
Note DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization IMU = intensive management unit in that box Itrsquos like a safety blanket (Eli)
mania = elevated memotional withdrawal and motor retarand conceptual disorganization aOnly clinically significant symptoms (raof the sample are presented
ood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement dation positive = hallucinations unu
ting of 4 or higher) that were repor
negative = blunted affect sual thought content
ted by 10 or more
Another respondent echoed a frequent complaint about the lack of mirrors con-tributing to the loss of identity
bFactors combine 3
toll of being in the cumulatively the times) and feeling
or 4 different symptoms that are
IMU (80 of respondents topic was mentioned 359 s of social isolation (73
commonly associated
And this quotatiisolation
Yoursquore not around
with one another14
on exemplifies social
people Irsquom around
This IMU has mirrors in the cell The majority of them do not And it gets really stressful when you canrsquot even see your own reflection I mean when you canrsquot even look at yourself you lose some of your self-identity (Eric)
of respondents cmentioned 192 ticerpt exemplifies descriptions
I bet you couldnrsquot the stuff you got tpain Therersquos a lo[and] Irsquove been doadapt to their surrthis life I donrsquot [tpseudonym as wi
TABLE 3 SerioPrevalence Was
Positive
Negative
DAGS
umulatively the t
the ldquoemotional t
walk in my shoes beo endure behind these walls of t you got to go through ing this for 11 years oundings but to get hink] you can (Michth all subsequent qu
us Mental Illness Shington State De
SMI (n
opic was mes) This interview ex-
ollrdquo
cause all
people used to ael a otations)
tatus and 20partment of
= 16) (No
50 (8)
630 (1)
5630 (9)
somebody right noand shackles on like dehumanizing No human being I feel land it does have an while yoursquore sitting
Two additional alent as other clinicitems like anxiety hypersensitivity (16
17 Brief Psychiatric
)
w with handcuffs Irsquom an animal Itrsquos human contact As [a] ike wersquore meant to socialize effect on your mentality in the cell (Chase)
symptoms were as prev-ally significant BPRS references to sensory of respondents
Rating Scale Factor Corrections 2017 2018
Non-SMI (n = 69) (No
1014 (7)
440 (3)
4780 (33)
Comparing Symptoms in and out of Solitary Confinement (2018)
Of the 80 respondents reinterviewed in the second year of this study 28 were in IMU custody and 52 were in the general prison population These 2 subpopulations provide important comparison groups between IMU residents and people in the general popula-tion because all initially entered the study through a random sample of IMU residents These subpopulations also provide a longi-tudinal view of how incarcerated people experience IMU conditions over 1 year and how they recover from these conditions ) as they re-enter the general population In Table 2 we compare cumulatively by sub-population symptom and factor scores in 2017 for IMU residents to 2018 scores for
Mania
Populationa
Note DAGS = deprehyperactivity and excitement negative positive = hallucinatmental illness aMental health data
ssion anxiety guilt
1875 (3)
1880 (16)
= blunted affeht content anions unusual thoug
were available only for 85 of 10
and somatization mania = elevated mct emotional withdrawd conceptual disorgan
13 (9)
8120 (69)
ood distractibility motor al and motor retardation ization SMI = serious
6 sampled incarcerated people
IMU respondents and respondents not in the IMU For respondents still in the IMU in 2018 all clinically significant symptoms that were prevalent among at least 10 of the pop-ulation were at least as prevalent in 2018 and 2 clinically significant factor scores were more prevalent (positive DAGS) For respondents
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S59
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Respondents discussed hy-persensitivity to sounds smells ldquo[and ] tiny thingsrdquo (Giovanni) In particular the sounds of doors opening and closing aggravated many respondents
All you got to do is hold it I mean you donrsquot got to slam it Itrsquos like [correctional officers] showing their power That ainrsquot cool You wouldnrsquot do that in your house would you (Tyler)
Respondents also talked about the in-
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
not in the IMU in 2018 the prevalence of clinically significant symptoms varied from more prevalent than in the 2017 sample (eg anxiety) to less prevalent (eg somatic con-cerns and guilt) and factor scores were either lower (ie positive negative DAGS) or similar (for mania) for respondents not in the IMU in 2018 Despite having an excep-tionally large sample size for a study of a solitary confinement population our study was not powered to establish statistically significant dif-ferences between the 2017 and 2018 data sets
DISCUSSION In this study we combined qualitative
interview data with structured quantitative measures of psychological and psychiatric outcomes in solitary confinement among 106 randomly sampled incarcerated people in Washington State documenting both a wide range and high prevalence of symptoms of psychological distress We highlight 4 major implications of this
First while the overall BPRS ratings we analyzed indicated limited psychological distress as documented in earlier studies1112
a closer examination of specific items and factors revealed that as many as half of re-spondents had at least 1 clinically significant symptom within the BPRS anxietyndashdepression factor Because other studies using the BPRS in solitary confinement settings employed earlier 18-item versions of the scale15 used the scale in combination with other scales11 or analyzed only total ratings12 our findings are not directly comparable with those in other BPRS studies However our findings are consistent with other studies including findings that 20 or more of Washington incarcerated people in solitary exhibited a ldquomarked or severe degree of distressrdquo15(p774) and that more than half of California incarcerated people in soli-tary reported ldquosymptoms of psychological distressrdquo28(p133) Our findings therefore high-light the importance of analyzing specific components of BPRS scores and not only aggregates which mask variation in both prevalence and severity of specific symptoms
Second administrative data confirmed that our participants had relatively high rates of documented mental health problems including rates of SMI and self-harming behavior (Table 1) SMI rates typically
estimated at 10 to 15 of prison pop-ulations829 are measured at 9 in Wash-ingtonrsquos general prison population but 20 in our IMU sample Likewise our qualitative data confirmed that people in solitary con-finement experience symptoms specific to those conditions not captured in standard psychiatric assessment instruments30 Both findings suggest an affirmative answer to the question of whether solitary confinement is associated with more and worse psycho-pathology than general population confine-ment As longitudinal case studies have illustrated930 disproportionate representa-tion of incarcerated people with psychopa-thology in solitary confinement reflects the interaction of clinical and security factors in prison custody decisions solitary confine-ment responds to behavior expressing psy-chopathology often undiagnosed and also aggravates the propensity of some incarcer-ated people to break down or act out31 For these reasons the causal role of solitary confinement is not established by aggre-gate comparisons of IMU and non-IMU populations
Third the comparisons we were able to make across multiple sources of data allowed us to identify a broader range of symptoms of distress than studies that have focused on only 1 or 2 sources of data such as administrative data8 psychiatric assessments11 or qualitative interviews2830 Symptoms such as anxiety and depression were especially prevalent in this population along with symptoms os-tensibly specific to solitary confinement such as sensory hypersensitivity and a perceived loss of identity (as found in other studies exploring solitary-specific symptoms7915283032)
Finally consistent with previous studies1112
we found that the prevalence of psychiatric distress did not significantly increase over time for incarcerated people that either stay or are released from the IMU 1 year later Yet our qualitative data suggest that the BPRS may not be capturing actual psychopathology as re-spondents pointed to psychiatric distressmdashin profoundly existential terms as in the pre-viously mentioned quotations regarding selfhood and identitymdashbeyond the 2-week time period evaluated by the BPRS and outside the scope of the instrument More-over although symptoms were not cumula-tively found to worsen they did persist at high rates for incarcerated people in and out of the
IMU in 1-year follow-up assessments These latter findings are also consistent with other studies underscoring the need for additional research comparing incarcerated peoplersquos ex-periences across different contexts and over time17152832
Limitations Five specific limitations are especially
notable First although our initial sample was relatively large for a solitary confinement population our 1-year follow-up group especially the number of respondents remaining in solitary confinement in the second year was relatively small limiting our ability to establish statistically significant findings about change over time and across contexts from BPRS data Second as our interview results revealed the BPRS does not capture the full spectrum of psychiatric distress incarcerated people experience in solitary confinement Third assessments of psycho-logical well-being would ideally occur at multiple times beyond the 2 we were able to conduct within the constraints of this mul-timethod study Fourth Washington State is not representative of most state prison systems in terms of the prevalence of people with mental illnesses in solitary confinement as WADOC has undertaken reforms in both treatment of mental illness and imposition of solitary confinement over the past 20 years including reforms designed to divert people with serious mental illness to specialized treatment units33 Moreover these reforms have radically improved systematic mental health record-keeping we would expect not only a lower prevalence of psychiatric symp-toms and less deterioration in WADOC in IMUs but also a higher rate of documentation of those symptoms that are present Finally although people in solitary confinement may exhibit distinctive or disproportionately severe psychopathology causal inference regarding the relationship between solitary confinement and psychopathology is beyond the analysis we are able to perform here
Conclusions and Implications We found a wide range and high preva-
lence of symptoms of psychiatric distress in this population including BPRS symptoms associated with anxiety and depression among
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AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
as many as half of our participants adminis-trative indicators of SMI among at least one fifth of our participants and condition-specific symptoms such as feelings of extreme social isolation in well more than half of our participants Moreover these symptoms persisted in the second year for participants in and out of solitary confinement
If we study people in solitary confinement solely with instruments validated with non-incarcerated populations such as the BPRS we may fail to capture the extent of incare-cerated peoplersquos psychological distress A re-spondentrsquos rating on a given symptom may not be ldquohigh enoughrdquo symptoms may not be experienced within the instrumentrsquos desig-nated time frame or the discursive strategies incarcerated people use to articulate their suffering might not correspond with clinical language Moreover past research reveals that incarcerated people develop coping mecha-nisms for solitary1232 and these along with the fact that speaking openly about psycho-logical distress conflicts with institutional norms of self-protection in prison1230 likely contribute to a systematic underreporting of distress These are critical limitations of standardized assessments of incarcerated people whose symptoms may fluctuate sub-stantially in presence and severity during time in solitary1732 Apart from symptoms or their severity this fluctuation itself is an integral aspect of incarcerated peoplersquos psychological distress34 but a need for repeated measure-ment makes it especially difficult to capture
Our findings still point to the importance of using standardized instruments which provide a baseline for assessing and inter-preting the psychological effects of solitary confinement Nonetheless additional sources of evidencemdashinterviews clinician observa-tions staff observations medical filesmdashare crucial for capturing the range of symptoms that people in solitary exhibit and those symptomsrsquo prevalence duration and severity over time Without the benefit of mixed methods and improved instruments re-searchers and policymakers alike will con-tinue not only to lack desired data but also to not know what data we lack Increasing the transparency of both conditions of con-finement and the associated health effects is critical to both question formulation and data gathering
As 5 to 15 of the United Statesrsquo 16 million incarcerated people are held in solitary confinement for at least part of their incar-ceration56 and virtually all of those people will be released all members of society have a vested interest in limiting the induction of psychopathology suggested by findings such as those presented here At least some of the symptoms we described here including identity loss and hypersensitivity resulted directly from specific conditions of confine-ment such as the absence of mirrors and the repetitive slamming of doors To the extent that solitary is meant to make people more manageable its association with psychopa-thology calls into question its usefulness let alone its justice And to the extent that solitary confinement has any causative role in psychopathology our collective goal should be prevention
CONTRIBUTORS K Reiter served as principal investigator on this study led data collection and analysis and conceptualized and led the writing of this article J Ventura trained the study team in applying the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) consulted on data collection and analysis and participated in writing this article D Lovell consulted on study design and data collection led the analysis of administrative data and participated in writing this article D Augustine M Barragan K Chesnut P Dashtgard G Gonzalez N Pifer and J Strong participated in project design participant interviews data analysis and writing of this article K Chesnut also served as project manager and with P Dashtgard participated in administrative data and BPRS analysis T Blair consulted on data analysis and participated in writing this article
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Funding for this research was provided by the Langeloth Foundation
The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Alyssa Cisneros Emma Conner and Rosa Greenbaum contributed to study design interviewed participants and analyzed data for this project Leida Rojas Elena Amaya and Keely Blissmer helped to clean and organize data Rebecca Tublitz analyzed administrative data Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor Multiple anonymous reviewers provided detailed critical feedback that improved this piece significantly Finally the incarcerated people who shared their experiences with us made this study possible
Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
HUMAN PARTICIPANT PROTECTION This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
REFERENCES 1 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J Public Health 200595(10)1692ndash1695
2 Reiter K 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016
3 United Nations Solitary confinement should be banned in most cases UN expert says UN News Centre October 18 2011 Available at httpsnewsunorgen story201110392012-solitary-confinement-should-be-banned-most-cases-un-expert-says Accessed October 22 2019
4 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States Am J Public Health 2015105(1)18ndash26
5 Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program Yale Law School Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms Nov 2016 Available at https lawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterliman documentaimingtoreduceticpdf Accessed April 23 2019
6 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 Bureau of Justice Statistics 2015 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112 pdf Accessed April 23 2019
7 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary con-finement a systematic critique Crime Justice 201847(1) 365ndash416
8 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014104(3)442ndash447
9 Lovell D Patterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prison Crim Justice Behav 200835(8)985ndash1004
10 Morgan RD Smith P Labrecque RM et al Quantitative syntheses of the effects of administrative segregation on inmatesrsquo well-being Psychol Public Policy Law 201622(4)439ndash461
11 OrsquoKeefe ML Klebe KJ Metzner J Dvoskin J Fellner J Stucker A A longitudinal study of adminis-trative segregation J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 2013 41(1) 49ndash60
12 Walters GD Checking the math do restrictive housing and mental health need add up to psychologi-cal deterioration Crim Justice Behav 201845(9)1347ndash1362
13 Overall JE Gorham DR The brief psychiatric rating scale Psychol Rep 196210(3)799ndash812
14 Ventura J Nuechterlein KH Subotnik KL Gutkind D Gilbert EA Symptom dimensions in recent-onset schizophrenia and mania a principal components analysis of the 24-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Psychiatry Res 200097(2-3)129ndash135
15 Cloyes KG Lovell D Allen DG Rhodes LA Assessment of psychosocial impairment in super-maximum security unit sample Crim Justice Behav 200633(6)760ndash781
16 Hassan L Birmingham L Harty MA et al Prospective cohort study of mental health during imprisonment Br J Psychiatry 2011198(1)37ndash42
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S61
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
17 Senior J Birmingham L Harty MA et al Identifi-cation and management of prisoners with severe psy-chiatric illness by specialist mental health services Psychol Med 201343(7)1511ndash1520
18 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121 US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfcpus16pdf Accessed April 23 2019
19 Phipps P Gagliardi G Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and services interim report Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 Available at httpwwwwsippwagov ReportFile836Wsipp_Washingtons-Dangerous-Mentally-Ill-Offender-Law-Program-Selection-and-Services-Interim-Report_Full-Reportpdf Accessed April 23 2019
20 Neyfakh L What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate April 2015 Available at httpsslatecom news-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml Accessed April 23 2019
21 Berzofsky M Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recom-mendations US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017 Available at httpswwwbjsgov contentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf Accessed April 23 2019
22 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014
23 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism isolation and normalization in Danish prisons Punishm Soc 2017 20(1)92ndash112
24 Ventura J Lukoff D Nuechterlein KH Liberman RP Green MF Shaner A Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) expanded version (40) scales anchor points and administration manual Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 19933227ndash244
25 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples J Stud Alcohol Drugs 200970(5)751ndash761
26 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study re-tention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2016113(20)5477ndash5485
27 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
28 Haney C Mental health issues in long-term solitary and ldquosupermaxrdquo confinement Crime Delinq 200349(1) 124ndash156
29 James DJ Glaze LE Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates Washington DC Bureau of Justice Statistics 2006
30 Toch H Adams K Acting Out Maladaptation in Prisons Washington DC American Psychological Asso-ciation 2002
31 Reiter K Blair T Superlative subjects institutional futility and the limits of punishment Berkeley J Criminal Law 201823(2)162ndash193
32 Rhodes L Total Confinement Madness and Reason in a Maximum Security Prison Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004
33 Guy A Locked up and locked down segregation of inmates with mental illness 2015 Disability Rights Washington Available at httpswww disabilityrightswaorgwp-contentuploads201712 LockedUpandLockedDown_September2016pdf Accessed April 23 2019
34 Reiter K Koenig KA Extreme Punishment Compar-ative Studies in Detention Incarceration and Solitary Con-finement New York NY Palgrave MacMillan 2015
S62 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
Appendix A Additional Methods Details
Protecting Vulnerable Populations
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all
information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To recruit participants a research team member approached each
prisoner at his cell-front explained the study and invited him to interview Willing prisoners
were escorted singly to a confidential area (monitored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff)
consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research team
All identifiable data collected for this project including interview audio recordings
transcripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office or in a secure server space accessible only through multi-
factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data cleaning and linking
The University of California IRB approved this study as did the WADOC research department
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Training and Application
At the conclusion of each interview in both year one and year two interviewers
completed ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items For self-report questions interviewers asked
about the presence of symptoms in the previous two weeks per BPRS standard26 The research
team completed 16 hours of in-person structured symptom assessment training sessions with an
expert in BPRS research (co-author Ventura) prior to the year-one interviews and completed
four hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews for a total of 20 hours of
training26 Using a set of seven standardized BPRS training videos of patient interviews the
research team viewed and rated each video and discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold
Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for interrater reliability All research team
members met the minimum standard of an ICC=80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years 2017
and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment team
when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the standard
training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings
Coding Process
To develop our codebook six team members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-
line27 generating an initial list of over 500 codes These codes were further refined and
categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 10 code groups After a round of
pilot coding in which each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one re-
coding coding discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of
interest such as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months
to resolve discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were
calculated for intercoder agreement
WADOC Disclosures
The research presented here utilizes a confidential Data File from the Department of
Corrections (DOC) located within the Washington Department of Corrections The views
expressed here are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the DOC or
other Data File contributors Any errors are attributable to the author(s)
Social Contact Policies 43
Health 46
Long-Term Management Challenges in the IMU 50
Re-Entry 51
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021 55
APPENDICES 58
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL 58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020 59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE 60
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE 9 1
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE 112
3
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This report represents the culmination of a four-year-long collaboration between the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) and Keramet Reiter as Principal Investigator
based at the University of California Irvine (UCI) The Langeloth Foundation funded the
research and the Washington Department of Corrections and its Office of Research along with
Tim Thrasher Mission Housing Administrator facilitated both data sharing and collection at
every step One central research question guided our work How and with what effects has Washington DOC reduced its reliance on restrictive housing
To answer this question the UCI team collected and analyzed administrative data describing
the entire DOC population at six snapshot intervals between 2002 and 2017 315 paper surveys
of prisoners and staff in Intensive Management Units (IMUs) 186 interviews (ranging between
45 minutes and three hours in length) with a random sample of prisoners on maximum custody
status in IMUs and 77 interviews (of similar durations as the prisoner interviews) with a
strategic convenience sample of staff in IMUs
In this executive summary we highlight our major findings in five key areas (1) research
practices (2) patterns in restrictive housing use in the 2000s (3) conditions in restrictive
housing (4) staff and (5) prisoner experiences And we provide a series of brief
recommendations following closely from these findings In the full report we discuss the
research protocols findings and recommendations in more detail
(1) RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Washington DOCrsquos commitment to collecting relevant data and sharing that data with
researchers is integral to its reform agenda
bull The unprecedented scope and scale of data collected and analyzed in this project
demonstrates the feasibility of sustained researcher-practitioner collaborations working towards improved prison practices
bull Over hundreds of hours on site conducting surveys and interviews (under Mission
Housing Administrator Tim Thrasherrsquos expert coordination) our research team
efficiently accomplished our target goals for data collection and felt safe throughout
4
(2) PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull DOC has implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals (1) reducing the
number of people in restrictive housing (2) reducing the length of time individuals spend
in restrictive housing and (3) mitigating the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive
housing Over the 2010s DOC has indeed made improvements in all three areas
bull The number of people on maximum custody status in IMUs across the state has
fluctuated from a low of 149 (in 2002) to a peak of 472 (in 2011) By 2014 reforms had
cut this peak population nearly in half to 283 But the population increased again by
more than 20 percent over the next three years rising back to 342 in 2017
bull While IMU populations have fluctuated mean lengths of stay in IMUs (for those at all
custody statuses) have decreased steadily since 2011 maximum custody prisoners now
spend an average of 214 days in IMUs 133 days less than in 2011
bull Although mean lengths of stay in the IMU fell significantly after 2011 an increasing proportion of people experience IMU confinement across snapshots and cumulative
time spent in the IMU increased steadily between 2002 and 2017
bull Both Hispanic prisoners and Hispanic-affiliated gang members are increasingly over-represented in the max custody-IMU population relative to their representation in the
general prison population over the 2002-2017 period
(3) CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull The IMUs function with less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than they did two decades ago as described by staff and seen in comparison with data
Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago
bull Access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of programming has increased
bull People are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons and receive regular
individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement
bull Those prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods represent
substantial management challenges (eg histories of repeated attacks on staff or of
serious mental illness) Washington DOC officials are national leaders in piloting
alternatives
5
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Staff participated eagerly and thoughtfully in interviews and repeatedly expressed
gratitude for the opportunity to both have a voice in policy evaluations and reflect on the intensity of their work in the IMU
bull IMU Staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their
colleagues and with immediate supervisors nearly 90 percent of correctional officers
surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unitrdquo for instance
bull Although staff felt safe working in the IMU they overwhelmingly felt hypervigilant (often even unsafe) outside of prison suggesting that their work in the IMU had health
and social consequences outside of the IMU
bull Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them from
ldquoheadquartersrdquo they desired more opportunities for input into policymaking
especially around safety and security needs and risks
bull Staff described specific objections to reforms (1) prioritization of prisoner well-being
over staff well-being (2) violation of mandates to be fair and consistent through
individualized accommodations and treatment plans for prisoners and (3) imposition of
extra burdens on staff (especially around additional movement of prisoners into more
programs) causing stress about fulfilling obligations and anxieties about safety
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food and care and
perceived staff as responsive to requests kites and grievances
bull Prisoners consistently expressed frustration with the long waitlists for classes and
programs waitlists which extended the durations of their IMU placements
bull Prisoners appreciated the good-faith efforts being made around programming in the
IMU but found many of the programs to be repetitive futile and not tailored to their
specific challenges and needs
bull Prisoners found social contact policies (who could visit) and practical barriers (phone
access and geographic distance) in the IMU frustrating and harmful to their well-being
6
bull Prisoners in the IMU frequently experienced clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety and guilt serious mental illness and self-harming behavior IMU-
induced symptoms of social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity
skin irritations and weight fluctuations un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
and musculoskeletal pain
bull Prisoners in the IMU were often just trying to make it through but upon release back
into the general prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and
physical challenges experienced while in the IMU
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Maintain long-standing commitment to systematically collecting robust data about
DOC policy and practice and collaboratively sharing and analyzing this data with
external independent researchers
PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull Continue to carefully track all forms of restrictive housing use including number of
people confined rates of confinement average and cumulative lengths of stay and
the over-representation of Hispanic prisoners
bull Continue work to reduce overall restrictive housing populations but also the
frequency with which people experience these conditions lengths of stay in these
conditions and disparate impact of these conditions on Hispanic prisoners
bull The racial disproportionality in IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories and suggests an
area ripe for further policy attention
CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Continue work to mitigate the harms of restrictive housing including provision of
counseling healthcare group activities and programs and individualized
assessments of placement decisions
7
STAFF EXPERIENCES
bull Seek out and integrate IMU staff perspectives into reform initiatives
bull Provide regular opportunities for staff to reflect on the challenges of work in the
IMU (with supervisors counselors and researchers)
bull Develop resources to address the unique stress of being hypervigilant outside of the
IMU
PRISONER EXPERIENCES
bull Shorten wait times to participate in IMU programs
bull Leverage existing programming infrastructure (personnel classrooms) to develop
more substantively useful content for IMU prisoners
bull Continue to develop and support social contact for IMU prisoners
bull Address and mitigate the ongoing physical and mental harms associated with IMU
placements especially by reducing barriers to accessing healthcare and improving
the quality of treatment
COMMITMENT TO REFORM
bull Maintain the Mission Housing Administrator position which is focused on
implementing restrictive housing reform
bull Consider implementing similar ldquomission housingrdquo positions at the institutional level
to facilitate ongoing individualized attention to address the intersection of health
and behavioral challenges among the highest security prisoners in the most
restrictive conditions of confinement
bull Develop state-level agreements to permit transfer of seriously mentally ill prisoners
from custody-oriented facilities to healthcare-oriented facilities
8
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT
The project at the broadest level sought to understand Washington Statersquos widely touted
reduction in solitary confinement use at both the level of quantitative administrative data and
at the level of lived experience for prisoners and staff The core claim in 2013 Washington had
reduced their solitary confinement population by more than half and implemented additional
reforms to shorten terms in segregation refocus on rehabilitation reframe responses to self-
harming prisoners and systematically intervene in prison-based violence through programs like
Operation Place Safety1 We started this project with two key questions
(1) What policies has Washington State implemented to reduce its reliance on restrictive
housing
(2) What are the impacts ndash on both prisoners and staff ndash of Washington statersquos restrictive
housing reduction program
To answer these questions we
bull Analyzed 15 years of administrative data six record sets of the entire DOC population
on evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and 2017)
including subject-level demographic records (N=57130) event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments
(12 million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million)
bull Administered paper surveys to prisoners on maximum custody status living in and staff
working in IMUs totaling 225 paper surveys collected from prisoners and 90 from
custody and non-custody staff
bull Conducted in-depth qualitative interviews (1) 106 interviews with a random sample of
maximum custody prisoners housed across all five of DOCrsquos IMUs in the summer of
2017 (2) 80 one-year follow-up interviews with 2017 participants still incarcerated in
the summer of 2018 (3) 77 interviews with a strategic convenience sample of custody
and non-custody staff working in and supervising IMUs in the summer of 2017
1 See Bernie Warner Dan Pacholke and Carly Kujath Operation Place Safety First Year in Review Jun 1 2014 (Washington State Department of Corrections) available online at httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
9
bull Collected DOC policies and reports about restrictive housing reform in the 2000s
conducted dozens of informal conversations with former DOC leadership to identify
policy changes and goals and observed multiple classification committee meetings
during visits to Washington state to administer surveys and conduct interviews
During both our survey administration and qualitative interview data collection phases we
worked with the Mission Housing Administrator to bring 8-9 research staff on site over multiple
days at each IMU in the state in 2017 and then at each prison housing year-one research
participants in 2018 At each institution staff worked with each other and the Mission Housing
Administrator to figure out how to move prisoners into secure interview rooms on and off
IMUs The cooperation was phenomenal and across hundreds of hours of interviews our
research staff uniformly felt comfortable and safe This project unprecedented in
While this report reviews in great detail preliminary scope and scale relied on findings from analyses of both interviews and Washington State DOCrsquos administrative data a broader implication of this partnership commitment to
extended partnership deserves acknowledging at the transparency and vision for reform
outset What Washington leadership at headquarters
and in the Research Department facilitated with this project is unprecedented in scope and
scale in prison research in the United States In facilitating this work Washington DOC has first
extended and amplified its reputation as a sought-after partner in research-practitioner
collaborations building on the collaborations between DOC and the University of Washington
in the late 1990s and early 2000s around mental health and solitary confinement And
Washington DOC has second proven that research like this is eminently possible The critical
insights here would not have been possible to discern without the bigger picture investments in
transparency and improvement to which Washington DOC is committed While prisoners staff
and administrative data itself point the way to possible policy recommendations to improve the
operation of Washington prisons these insights are all-the-more-important for other prison
systems which provide less room for analytic insights but offer more room for improvement
METHODS
This study sought to systematically evaluate Washington DOCrsquos use of long-term isolation over
time through rigorous application of mixed methods Comprehensive research studies about
restrictive housing use over more than a few years in any given state are rare and analyses
incorporating qualitative interviews with prisoners and staff are rarer still Only a few studies
exist of specific ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities one of these conducted in the Washington DOC was
10
completed more than 10 years ago2 A few additional studies have sought to analyze statistics
about durations of confinement racial impacts of isolation violence in isolation and recidivism
rates post-release from isolation in several different states3 This study then breaks new
ground for researchers and policymakers alike For this reason we share here a detailed
description of our methods in hopes that this research will serve as a model for both future
studies and ongoing researcher-practitioner collaborations
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION
At the center of our quantitative data analysis is a longitudinal administrative record set of the
entire DOC population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011
2014 and 2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12
million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) The scale and scope of
this data permitted our research team to independently develop measures of critical
independent variables like criminal history as well as of key dependent variables of interest
like rates of restrictive housing use Specifically this data set included the entire prison
conviction history for all 57000 prisoners in subject population permitting our research team
to independently identify the most serious current offense and to provide a consistent measure
of prisonersrsquo criminal histories in our analyses And this data set included not just prisoners in
some form of restrictive housing but the entire prison
population on each given snapshot date allowing us to
independently define and operationalize restrictive
housing use
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying
uniform coding procedures to compile event-level data
Quantitative Data bull 15 years 6 snapshot
intervals 2002-2017 bull 57130 subject-level records bull 24 million inter-facility
movements
2 Lorna Rhodes Total Confinement Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004) Sharon Shalev Supermax Controlling risk through solitary confinement (Portland OR Willan Publishing 2009) Keramet Reiter 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016)
3 See eg CS Briggs JL Sundt and TC Castellano ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 (2003) 1341-1376 David Lovell Kristin Cloyes David G Allen amp Lorna A Rhodes ldquoWho Lives in Supermaximum Custody A Washington State Studyrdquo Federal Probation Vol 642 (Dec 2000) 33-38 Daniel P Mears amp William D Bales ldquoSupermax Incarceration and Recidivismrdquo Criminology Vol 474 (2009) 1131-65 Keramet Reiter ldquoParole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007rdquo Punishment amp Society Vol 145 530-63 (Dec 2012)
11
into a subject-level dataset We computed the housing location and custody status of every
prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at each location and
subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as infractions
Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and plausible counts
and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all prisoners in six
snapshot cohorts We also used inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-tests) to test for
differences across cohorts and groups
We measured restrictive housing use by examining the intersection of custody status and
location identifying all prisoners assigned to maximum custody status (the highest level of
custody classification in DOC) all prisoners housed in Intensive Management Units (the most
secure housing units in DOC) and focusing in particular on individuals at the intersection of
this status and location Appendix A includes a matrix detailing more specifically how we
operationalized and measured restrictive housing use in DOC In a meeting with Research
Department Staff on December 7 2020 we confirmed this operationalization was consistent
with how DOC research staff are measuring restrictive housing use in DOC currently
Our operationalization of restrictive housing potentially undercounts one category of individual
in restrictive housing those who are neither assigned a maximum custody status nor housed in
an IMU but are nonetheless in some form of segregation (likely administrative or disciplinary)
Our analysis of prisonersrsquo confinement status used movement records to distinguish periods in
IMU from time spent either in other specialized facilities or in the general prison population
(ldquogeneral populationrdquo) but excluded within facility movements from one bed or cell to another
(likely 50 million in number for our subjects) A prisoner placed in segregation prior to transfer
to an IMU or assignment of maximum custody status would not be captured in our counts
Since 2015 the Research Department has had a flag in OMNI for ldquoad seg statusrdquo which allows
them to better capture this population that we do not observe this flag was not present in the
data obtained from DOC and no such flag exists for the pre-2015 data we analyze
In order to better account for the variation in both restrictive housing capacity and
characteristics over the entire fifteen years of our data set we worked closely with Kevin
Walker and Tim Thrasher to identify both (1) IMU capacity and (2) restrictive housing capacity
within non-IMU facilities over the entire 15-year-period of our study Appendix B includes a
table with our estimates of these capacities
We also systematically collected and categorized restrictive-housing oriented policy reforms
and reports between 2011 and 2017 peak periods of reform and focus of this study
12
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
Survey Data bull 225 prisoner surveys
(response rate 62) bull 90 staff surveys
(response rate na)
Prisoner surveys included 36 numbered questions Each contained a combination of yesno
ordinal bubble options and short answer sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to
explain or elaborate on their answers Topics included experiences in IMUs conditions of
confinement health and well-being and demographic background many questions were
drawn from existing studies on prisons and prisoner
experiences4 In all there were 89 substantive items on the
survey (excluding demographic questions) coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU)
ordinal (eg daily weekly monthly describing frequency of
interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) variables
Staff surveys included 70 numbered questions Most questions were yesno or multiple choice
but there were also some open-ended probing questions Topics included corrections
employment history job responsibilities experience working in the IMU beliefs regarding
restrictive housing attitudes towards coworkers and supervisors opinions regarding restrictive
housing reforms feelings of safety health and well-being and demographic information Many
questions were drawn from existing studies with correctional staff5
Between February and April 2017 PI Reiter and Project Manager Chesnut conducted two
separate trips to collect survey data from prisoners and staff across all five of the IMUs in DOC
Surveys were piloted at MCC in February 2017 to allow for slight revisions of any confusing text
in the instrument Surveys were distributed to prisoners and staff in IMUs at the remaining four
facilities (CBCC SCCC WCC and WSP) at the end of March and beginning of April 2017 At each
site Reiter and Chesnut first spoke individually to each maximum custody status IMU prisoner
at cell-front accompanied by Mission Housing Administrator Thrasher We explained survey
participation was optional and that all data would be anonymized and answered any questions
about the research project For security reasons only paper-and-pen surveys were offered to
4 For studies from which relevant questions were drawn see Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates (Santa Monica CA The Rand Corporation 1982 Report No N-1635-NIJ) Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014) Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J ldquoTheoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation and normalization in Danish prisonsrdquo Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
5 See eg J Sundt ldquoThe Effect of Administrative Segregation on Prison Order and Organizational Culturerdquo in Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and Future Directions NCJ 250323 (Washington DC US Department of Justice National Institute of Justice 2016)
13
the maximum custody prisoner population surveys were distributed first thing in the morning
and collected a few hours later by Reiter and Chesnut We also provided stamped self-
addressed envelopes upon request for those participants who wanted additional time In total
we distributed surveys to all 363 prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU in spring of
2017 prisoners returned 225 surveys for a response rate of 62
Following survey distribution to the prisoners we held an informal question-and-answer
session with custody staff on the unit to introduce ourselves and the research project Staff
like prisoners were informed that the survey was optional anonymized and only aggregated
results would be shared with DOC We then distributed paper surveys to custody and non-
custody staff working in each IMU We encouraged staff to return the surveys to us before we
left each facility but we also provided staff with self-addressed stamped envelopes upon
request For staff we also shared digital copies of the survey through e-mail following each site
visit We also made a special effort to seek out non-custody staff working in the IMU such as
medical staff mental health workers classification counselors and program facilitators In
order to be as inclusive as possible we repeated this process again in the afternoon following
shift change and left copies of the surveys with self-addressed stamped envelopes for the
graveyard shift In all staff returned 90 surveys Calculating a response rate for this strategic
convenience sample is not possible because we sought to reach staff across all three shifts
included non-custody staff like nurses and educators who sometimes work across units and
distributed surveys in person and via e-mail
The surveys served a dual purpose in the research project First they provided a baseline
understanding of the challenges of living and working in Washington IMUs as well as of the
attitudes towards recent reforms which was critical to the research team as we developed
interview instruments and conducted interviews Second they gave the research team an
opportunity to introduce the research project to prisoners and staff laying the groundwork for
interview participation in subsequent months
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
The qualitative prisoner interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured
questions Questions included a combination of yesno options and probing open-ended
follow-ups Topics included conditions of daily life (prior to and during isolation) perceived
state of physical and mental health access to medical treatment and experiences with
required programming in the IMU Where possible included questions replicated those asked
in existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences Fourteen of the questions making up
the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) a standardized scale used to identify indicators of
serious mental illness were embedded within the interview instrument In total 40 of the
14
substantive items on the interview instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 14
embedded questions designed to establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg How much does it cost Interview Instruments to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have bull Questions about conditions you noticed any changes in your health since you health programming reforms have been in this IMU) variables Such questions demographics always included open-ended follow-up questions bull Embedded Brief Psychiatric (eg Can you describe those changes) We first used Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment the interview instrument at the smallest IMU in for prisoners Washington interviewing 15 prisoners We then
revised both the wording and ordering of questions for maximum clarity and engagement in the
remaining 91 interviews we conducted across the four other IMUs in the state
The condensed year-two instrument contained approximately 70 questions The questions
largely replicated the year-one questions ndash but excluded the questions about background
demographic and experiences over time in prison and adjusted some other questions to
address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status As part of both initial and
follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psychological assessment both
during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following (for the 10 observational
items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech) interviews For the 14 self-
report questions embedded in the interview guide interviewers asked about the presence of
symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard Importantly this means that BPRS scores
certainly undercount symptoms experienced intermittently or outside of that two-week time
window
The qualitative staff interview instrument consisted of 87 numbered semi-structured questions
As with the prisoner interview instrument these questions included a combination of yesno
questions and probing open-ended follow-up questions Topics included IMU policies job
responsibilities personal safety health relationships with coworkers and supervisors
restrictive housing reforms and demographic information
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and to develop the interview
instruments Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol
for administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment
training sessions in year one with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Ventura and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Using a set of seven standardized
BPRS training videos of patient interviews the research team viewed and rated each video and
15
discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for
interrater reliability Dr Ventura conducted an interrater reliability analysis and confirmed that
trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years
2017 and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment
team when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the
standard training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings In addition to
ensure appropriate administration of the BPRS in a prison setting Dr Ventura accompanied the
research team on the first leg of the first visit to MCC in year one Dr Ventura co-conducted
interviews with several team members and was available to clarify questions throughout the
length of the trip In sum this extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members
over the two years (9 women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral
students (9) with expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement
settings identified and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being
studied and minimized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application
of questions and assessments
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that
all information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To identify potential participants the Mission Housing Administrator
provided a list of all prisoners on maximum custody status at a given IMU a day or two prior to
the research teamrsquos visit to that IMU Chesnut then randomized that list of prisoners in order
to identify a list and order of potential research participants (with the target goal of
interviewing roughly one-third of maximum custody status prisoners in each IMU) To recruit
participants a research team member approached potential participants at cell-front
explained the study and noted whether the prisoner would be interested in participating
Willing prisoners were escorted one-by-one to a confidential area (monitored visually but not
aurally by DOC staff) consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research
team In all 106 prisoners participated in interviews 39 percent of the prisoners approached
for participation refused comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people6 Interviews
ranged in length from 45 minutes to 3 hours
6 D Lovell ldquoPatterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prisonrdquo Criminal Justice amp Behavior Vol 358 985ndash1004 (2008) M Berzofsky amp S Zimmer National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recommendations
16
Immediately following year-one interviews interviewers asked participants whether they
consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to participating in one-year
follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all but two (n = 104)
consented in writing to medical file reviews At Interviews Completed the conclusion of each prisoner interview in both bull Random sample of prisoners year year one and year two interviewers completed one 106 ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items Following bull Follow-up prisoner interviews interviews interviewers reviewed consenting year two 80 participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of bull Strategic convenience sample of diagnoses prescriptions and substance abuse staff year one 77 status DOC additionally provided electronic
administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as
comparable population-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
In year two the UCI research team attempted to re-interview all of the year-one participants
who were still incarcerated within Washington DOC In total we conducted 80 re-interviews
Only 4 participants refused re-interviews 1 died and 21 were unavailable because of
institutional transfers or being on parole This drop-out rate is low compared to similar studies7
In year two 28 participants were in the IMU and 52 were back in the general prison
population These year-two follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and two hours
During the research teamrsquos return visits to each IMU in the state in year two the team made
presentations to IMU staff about the research findings from year one including the results of
the year-one staff interviews Unlike prisoners staff were not randomly selected for interviews
during year one Rather a strategic convenience sample of custody and non-custody staff was
identified Efforts were made to interview custody staff from all three shifts non-custody staff
(medical and programming) and supervisory staff at all five facilities Staff at each facility were
informed ahead of time about scheduled interview trips and encouraged by DOC administrative
leadership to participate if they felt comfortable Once on site at each facility UCI team
(US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018) httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf
7 JH Kleschinsky LB Bosworth SE Nelson EK Walsh HJ Shaffer ldquoPersistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samplesrdquo J Stud Alcohol Drugs Vol 705751ndash761 (2009) B Western A Braga D Hureau C Sirois ldquoStudy retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach populationrdquo Proc Natl Acad Sci USA Vol 11320 5477ndash5485 (2016)
17
members directly approached staff (usually in the afternoon or on the second day of interviews
on site after the work of identifying and moving prisoners into interview rooms was underway)
to identify willing interview participants Staff were informed participation was voluntary and
would not involve incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them
adversely and that all information shared would be protected and anonymized In all 77 staff
from across all five IMUs and headquarters participated in interviews Staff included
correctional officers supervisors mental and medical health practitioners program and
educational instructors and institutional and headquarters leadership Since staff were
strategically sampled and many staff interviewed worked both in the IMU and in other units
within the prison a refusal rate cannot readily be calculated for the staff interviews Staff
interviews lasted between 30 minutes and 3 hours
All interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed
translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details
(names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti for analysis (as discussed further below) All
identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings transcripts
BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a locked
filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible only
through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data
cleaning and linking The University of California IRB approved this study as did the Washington
DOC research department
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS
To develop a codebook for analyzing these hundreds of hours of interview data six team
members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-line inductively exploring how participants
understood restrictive housing generating an initial list of over 500 codes8 These codes were
further refined and categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 9 thematic
code groups IMU Relations Use of Force Safety Health IMU Culture IMU Policy IMU
Conditions Enduring the IMU and Prison Work Issues After a round of pilot coding in which
each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one recoding coding
discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of interest such
as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months to resolve
8 K Charmaz Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis (Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006) Y Chun Tie M Birks K Francis ldquoGrounded theory research A design framework for novice researchersrdquo SAGE open medicine 7 1-8 (2019)
18
discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were calculated
for intercoder agreement
BPRS data were imported into SPSS and Stata to generate descriptive statistics including the
comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS items and factors among three groups of
prisoner interview participants year-one participants year-two participants housed in the IMU
and year-two participants housed in the general population Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos
test were performed to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing
location time raceethnicity and gang status
FINDINGS
We collected a large amount of robustly detailed data for this project and are still in the process
of analyzing and synthesizing across the administrative data surveys and interview transcripts
To date the UCI research team has published three peer-reviewed articles based on this
research two drawing primarily on the prisoner
interviews in leading public health journals the Initial Publications American Journal of Public Health and PLOS One 1 Reiter et al American Journal of
Public Health (2020) and one drawing primarily on DOC administrative 2 Strong et al PLOS One (2020) data in a leading criminology journal Justice 3 Lovell et al Justice Quarterly (2020) Quarterly All three articles are included as
appendices to this report In addition to
summarizing findings from those articles here we include as-yet unpublished findings from our
analyses of administrative data and our surveys and interviews with prisoners and staff We
present three categories of findings (1) patterns and conditions in restrictive housing use (2)
impacts on staff and (3) impacts on prisoners
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
Over the 2010s DOC implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals we focus on
analyzing here First DOC sought to reduce the number of people in restrictive housing
Second DOC sought to reduce the length of time individuals spend in restrictive housing Third
DOC sought to mitigate the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive housing Our analysis
indeed finds improvements in each of these three areas of focus though we also identify
fluctuations in the degree of improvement barriers and challenges to implementing these
improvements and additional areas that might deserve to be the focus of additional reforms
We focus in this section primarily on our analysis of administrative data the six cohorts of
snapshot data at three-year-intervals between 2002 and 2017 along with restrictive-housing
oriented policy reforms and reports we collected as part of our analysis We concentrate
19
particularly on maximum custody status in the IMU the central focus of our study However
where relevant we also present findings on other population in the IMU As we detail in our
2020 Justice Quarterly article (Appendix C) where we published some of the initial findings
presented here a range of custody statuses and housing locations are highly relevant to
understanding overall restrictive housing use For instance those on maximum custody status
outside of an IMU and those not on maximum custody status in an IMU both experience
restrictive housing conditions and also reflect the range of behavioral challenges and security
threats DOC is managing at any given time
FLUCTUATIONS IN POPULATIONS AND LENGTHS OF STAY IN IMUS
Overall the maximum custody population in IMUs in Washington state was lower in 2017 (342
prisoners) than at its peak in 2011 (472 prisoners) However over the entire period of our
quantitative data analysis there were many fluctuations in this population from a low of 149
prisoners in 2002 to another dip to 283 prisoners in 2014 Figure 1 presents the number of
prisoners in IMUs by custody status from 2002 to 2017 These numbers suggest that the widely
touted reductions in the DOC maximum custody IMU population which inspired this study
were not sustained over the course of the study Those in IMU who were not on maximum
custody statusmdashlargely those held on administrative or disciplinary segregationmdashsaw similar
variation in population over time peaking in 2008 and falling somewhat in subsequent years
Figure 1 Prisoners in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
800
700
s r 600
en 177
osi 500 337
r 260
Pf 291
o 400
r e 300
mb 144
Nu 472
200 105 338 342
283 100 228
149
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
As a proportion of the total prison population those held in IMUs peaked in 2008 when 39
percent of the prison population was housed in an IMU That proportion was substantially
20
similar in 2011 before dropping slightly in 2014 and 2017 Figure 2 presents the percentage of
the total prison population held in IMU by custody status
Figure 2 Percentage of Total Prison Population in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
3 27
20
09
14
16
09
19
10
17141
2
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n 19
07
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
Ave
rage
Day
s in
IMU
Reductions in the average length of stay (LOS) for prisoners on maximum custody status in the
IMU were more sustained than the 2014 population reductions Figure 3 presents the average
number of days in the IMU by custody status For those on maximum custody status in the IMU
on the 2017 snapshot date the average LOS in the IMU was 214 days lower than even in 2002
(average LOS 227 days) and a dramatic decrease from the 2011 peak average LOS of nearly
348 days This represents a reduction in average lengths of IMU stays of more than four months
ndash an impressive policy intervention Similarly the average LOS in IMU for those held in IMUs but
not on maximum custody status on the snapshot date (likely those on administrative or
disciplinary segregation) saw a sustained decrease across the study period from an average of
114 days in 2002 to 71 days in 2017
Figure 3 Average Length of Stay in IMU (Days) by Custody Status and Confinement Location 2002-2017
348 326
214
128117115 91
7166
306 284
227
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
21
These reductions in the average IMU LOS however is only one measure of how much time
prisoners are spending in IMUs Another measure of time-in-the-IMU is cumulative over a
prisonerrsquos entire sentence how much time Figure 4 Average Cumulative Days Spent in IMU by All Prisoners 2002-2017 will he spend in an IMU setting9 Across the
entire Washington prison population 90 cumulative time spent in an IMU has 80 increased steadily from an average of 43
Cum
ulat
ive
Day
s in
IMU
in IMU declined in recent years for the maximum custody population a greater share of the
incarcerated population experienced placement in an IMU
This analysis suggests two critical areas of focus Figure 5 Percentage of All Prisoners Spending at Least One Day in an IMU 2002-2017 IMU reform First reductions in IMU
populations and lengths of stay must be 3433tracked over time to analyze whether they are
sustained Second rates of IMU use represent
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n
another critical measure in assessing IMU
reform in addition to populations and lengths
of stay In our 2020 Justice Quarterly article we
hypothesize that IMU capacity is closely tied to
IMU use noting that IMU populations increase
with increasing bed capacity and decrease with
decreasing bed capacity this hypothesis
requires further analysis and deserves further
policy attention
24 25 28
30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
days in 2002 to almost double that at 82
days on average in 2017 (see Figure 4)
Indeed a greater proportion of people in
DOC experienced IMU confinement over
time In 2002 24 of the prison population
had spent at least one day in an IMU By
2017 over one-third (34) of the prison
population had spent time in an IMU (Figure
5) In short while the average length of stay
9 For each snapshot year cumulative length of stay in IMU is measured from the beginning of each prisonerrsquos current sentence up until the snapshot date
22
In sum the 2014 reductions in maximum custody IMU populations in Washington have not been sustained Average lengths of stay in IMU for the maximum custody population have steadily decreased since 2011 but more prisoners in Washington DOC experience IMU
confinement each year Decreasing IMU capacity and reducing lengths of stay are both key to
sustaining decreases in IMU populations
RACIAL DISPROPORTIONALITIES
While Washington DOC had some successes in reducing IMU use especially in reducing average
lengths of stay the racially disproportionate impact of the IMU has increased dramatically since
2002 The racial disproportion of the IMU actually peaked in 2014 when the IMU population
had recently declined Figure 6 presents the racialethnic makeup of the IMU maximum custody
and general prison populations In 2014 37 percent of
maximum custody IMU prisoners were Hispanic as
compared to only 12 percent of the general prison
population As the maximum custody IMU population
increased this racial disproportionality decreased
slightly in 2017 27 percent of maximum custody IMU
prisoners were Hispanic as compared to only 13 percent of the general prison population
Figure 7 presents the racialethnic disproportionality of the IMU maximum custody population
relative to the general prison population Hispanic gang members were similarly over-
represented in the maximum custody IMU population in these years (see Figure 8)
This racial disproportionality in maximum custody IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories (especially infraction rates)
and suggests an area ripe for further policy attention We look forward to conducting further
analyses of the administrative data to better understand how these various predictors of
maximum custody status IMU classifications interact over time
Between 2005 and 2017 Hispanic prisoners were 2-3 times as likely to be in the IMU as in the general prison population
23
Figure 4 Racial and Ethnic Make-Up IMU Maximum Custody and General Prison Population 2002-2017
White Non-Hispanic LatinoHispanic
70 70
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population General Population IMU-Max IMU-Max
Black Non-Hispanic Other Non-Hispanic
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
30 30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max General Population IMU-Max
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
0
10
20
24
-
Figure 5 RacialEthnic Disproportionality in the IMU Maximum Custody Population 2002-2017 D
ispro
port
iona
lity
Ratio
35
30
25
20
15
10
05
00 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
White Non-Hispanic Black Non-Hispanic OtherUnknown Hispanic
How to read this chart
Disproportionality ratios (DR) greater than one reflect disproportionate representation in the IMU Maximum Custody population relative to the general population
DR equal to one reflects equal representation in IMU Maximum Custody and general population groups
DR lower than one reflects an under representation of the racialethnic group
25
BEHAVIORAL PROFILES GANG AFFILIATION AND SERIOUS INFRACTIONS
While our analysis demonstrates that racial disproportionality steadily increased among maximum custody IMU prisoners over the study period especially relative to the general prison population overall behavioral profiles among both general population and maximum custody IMU prisoners fluctuated over the study period
First in the general population the overall proportion of prisoners identified as gang affiliated increased only slightly over the study period from 19 percent to 24 percent of all prisoners While the overall proportion of gang-affiliated prisoners in the IMU was about 3 times higher this proportion also increased only slightly over the study period from 60 percent to 67 percent of all maximum custody IMU prisoners In the general population white- and black-affiliated gang members remained relatively stable over the study period (4-5 percent of the population and 9-10 percent of the population respectively) In the maximum-custody IMU population white- and black-affiliated gang membership fluctuated somewhat across the snapshot years while Hispanic-affiliated gang membership increased substantially from 21 percent in 2002 to 32 percent in 2017 Relative to their share of general population Hispanic-affiliated gang members were consistently over-represented in the maximum-custody IMU population making up nearly 40 percent of the population in both 2008 and 2014 Figure 8 displays this fluctuating over-representation of Hispanic-affiliated gang members while Figure 9 displays the racial breakdown of gang-affiliates in the maximum custody IMU population
Figure 6 Affiliation with HispanicLatino Gangs in IMU
Maximum Custody and General Populations
Between 2002 and 2017 Hispanic-affiliated gang membership in the general prison population doubled from 4 percent to 8 percent and in the maximum custody IMU population doubled from 21 percent to a peak of 40 percent in 2014
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max
26
Figure 7 Gang Affiliation in the IMU Maximum Custody Population by Type of Gang
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Hispanic-Affiliated Black-Affiliated White-Affiliated Other Gang
Second in the general population overall annual infraction rates decreased slightly over the study period (from an average of 13 infractions per year in 2002 to an average of 11 in 2017) Figure 10 displays average annual overall infraction rates as well as counts of violent assaults and staff assaults for the maximum custody IMU and general prison populations Average numbers of violent infraction and staff assaults remained low and stable at an average of 05 violent infractions per year and 01 staff assaults per
Annual infraction rates and counts year in the general population Between 2005 and of both violent and staff
2017 infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU infractions were fairly stable over population were fairly stable However overall time in both the general prison infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU population and the maximum population were about 5-6 times higher than in the custody IMU population from 2005 general prison population Following a peak of 83 in 2002 the mean annual infraction rate for the maximum custody IMU population fluctuated between 4 and 5 infractions per year while the average number of violent infractions hovered around 3 and the average number of staff assaults hovered just under one The relative stability of serious misconduct in both the general and the maximum custody IMU populations (as compared to the instability of the IMU population over this period) raise questions about whether and how infractions are related to maximum custody IMU placements ndash questions we look forward to addressing in future analyses
27
Figure 8 In-Prison Violations IMU Maximum Cu stody and General Population 2002-2017
IMU Maximum Custody General Population
9 9
8 8
s n 7 7
oitca 6 6
rfnI f 5 5
o e ta 4 4
Rtn 3 3
uC
o
2 2
1 1
0 0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Annual Infraction Rate Annual Infraction Rate Violent Infractions (Count) Violent Infractions (Count) Staff Assaults (Count) Staff Assaults (Count)
EXISTING POLICY REFORM SUPPORTS FURTHER RESTRICTIVE HOUSING REDUCTIONS
Over the 2010s Washington DOC enacted an impressively wide range of reforms in order to achieve the reductions in IMU populations and lengths of stay described above These reforms also sought to mitigate the harshness of the conditions in IMUs or restrictive housing Table 1 below provides our summary of the reforms we learned about in conversations with DOC leadership staff and prisoners as well as through searches of policy documents archived on the DOC website These reforms included (a) institutionally-oriented reforms like altering conditions of confinement especially through providing new programming opportunities for prisoners in the IMU (b) organizational restructuring designed to facilitate delivering these new programs and (c) individually-focused reforms to support behavioral modification better mental health care and alternatives to IMU placements Dan Pacholke who was the Secretary of Corrections during the early planning stages of this project co-authored a 2015 report More
28
Than Emptying Beds which describes many of these reforms in more detail centralize decision-making implement programming in segregation and support staff10
Our interviews with prisoners and staff confirmed that these reforms were making a difference day-to-day in terms of the overall operation and individual experience of living and working in the IMUs Specifically staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
Table 1 Categories and Types of Washington DOC Restrictive Housing Reform as identified in 2017
Conditions of Confinement
Organizational Restructuring
Behavior Modification
Mental Health Preventative
Congregate Programming
Creation of a Mission Housing Administrator
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (in-cell)
Elimination of self-harm infractions
Alternative sanctions
Level System Mission-Based Housing Units
amp Teams
Individual Behavior Management
Program (IBMP)
Disruptive Hygiene Protocol
Alternative Specialized
Housing Units (TRU WRU)
Increased Elective access to
programming (GED
Redemption
Facility Risk Management
Teams
Chemical dependency class
counselors MH staff
(attending to
Operation Place Safety (2013-14)
Book Club) prisoner-staff ratios)
Nature Immersion
(Blue) Room
Indeterminate sentencing
TransitionStep-down Unit
From staff we consistently heard that there was less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than in the early 2000s Staff described how prior to recent reforms in the IMUs cell extractions were common ldquoIt was completely rocking and rollingrdquo was a phrase we heard repeatedly But by 2017 cell extractions and other violent prisoner-staff encounters were rare One staff member we interviewed mourned the change acknowledging ldquoI really enjoyed cell extractionsrdquo but he also said he knew the culture change represented an improvement in everyonersquos well-being ldquoIs it actually good for everyone to do that stuff you know what I mean No The answer is nordquo This acceptance of non-violent de-escalation as the
10 Dan Pacholke amp Sandy Mullins More Than Emptying Beds A Systems Approach to Segregation Reform (Washington DC Bureau of Justice Assistance 2015) No NCJ249858 httpsbjaojpgovsitesgfilesxyckuh186filespublicationsMorethanEmptyingBedspdf
29
status quo was especially noticeable in comparison with data Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago Prisoners also agreed that cell extractions were rare as one noted ldquoWere not doing a lot of cell-extractions here I havent seen a cell-extraction since Ive been here So compared to the California system and the Federal system ndash I was teamed [extracted
from my cell] just to give me fluidsrdquo Our pre-interview Staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
surveys confirmed these qualitative descriptions a majority of staff (just over 60 percent of respondents) reported they ldquodid not feel unsaferdquo working in the IMU and even more prisoners (75 percent of respondents) reported that they had never felt unsafe in the IMU
From prisoners we consistently heard that they had access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of other programs Although prisoners frequently expressed concerns about the quality and frequency of healthcare they received they also consistently reported that they were able to access at least some care filing and receiving responses to medical kites seeing medical staff regularly and getting adequate care for major illnesses and terminal diseases like cancer For instance in our pre-interview surveys more than 50 percent of prisoners reported seeing medical staff daily One prisonerrsquos comments were representative ldquoI do trust the mental health staff yes I just believe that they should do morerdquo But another said he appreciated the level of care in his current IMU ldquoI would say that this one addresses certain mental health issues better than others you know Theyrsquore more quick to deal with the mental health here with more one-on-onerdquo
Overall in our interviews with prisoners and staff as well as in our observations of custody classification committee meetings we saw that those prisoners remaining on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods
bull Prisoners are in the IMU for had well-documented histories of severe
specific identifiable reasons behavioral issues We interviewed prisoners who
bull Prisoners receive regular had repeatedly attacked staff prisoners who had individualized assessments regarding repeatedly harmed themselves through actions their continued IMU placement like head banging and swallowing sharp objects bull Treatment and custody staff work and prisoners who had been in the IMU so long together to develop targeted they did not want to return to the general prison interventions with the goal of population In observations in IMUs and at transitioning even the most headquarters we witnessed compassionate behaviorally challenging and risky custody and treatment staff grappling with how to individuals out of the IMU design individualized plans to address and overcome these behavioral challenges ndash from weekly check-ins with headquarters leadership to the provision of tailored incentives for exercise equipment and art supplies In particular the
30
Mission Housing Administrator is familiar with every individual in the IMU regularly assessing and documenting justifications for their placem ent institutionalizing such individual-level knowledge and attention is critical to maintenance of existing progress and continued reform
In sum prisoners are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons prisoners receive regular individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement by a classification committee and treatment and custody staff work together to develop targeted interventions with the goal of transi tioning e ven the most behavioral ly chall enging and risk y i ndividuals out of the IMU This is in stark contrast to other systems like California where hundreds of prisoners have spent years in restrictive housing with little or no evidence of unresolved or severe behavioral issues justifying their continued maintenance in highly restrictive conditions
Still administrative data suggests that Washington DOC rsquos 2014 IMU population reductions have not been sustained that an increasing proportion of people in DOC experience IMU
confinement over the study period and that Washington DOC is a leader among state this confinement has a racially correctional systems in restrictive housing disproportionate impact Moreover as we reform administrative leaders have built a detail below prisoners and staff raised a solid foundation for continued reforms ndash number of concerns with both IMU conditions including IMU population reductions and reforms decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions Nonetheless Washington DOC has laid a solid
foundation for continued reforms ndash including IMU population reductions decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions ndash with the policy changes they have implemented over the last five years especially Both individual- and institution-level reforms have enabled the successes DOC has achieved to date Indeed these reforms demonstrate that Washington is a leader among state correctional systems in seeking to understand how prisoners end up in restrictive housing for extended periods designing programs to change IMU -stay trajectories and implementing alternati ve pathways that shift patterns of restrictive housing placements across institutions
IMPACTS ON STAFF
In this section we focus on our analysis of (1) the 90 surveys we collected from staff working in IMUs and (2) the 77 interviews we conducted with sta ff working in or supervising Among the 90 staff completing sur veys 74 per cent were mal e 66 pe rcent were married 84 perce nt were white and their average age was 44 Among the 77 staff completing interviews 74 percent were male 57 percent were marrie d 84 percent were white and their average age was 42
31
Because we do not have overall demographics of staff in W ashington DOC we cannot compare the demographics of our interview participants to the overall demographics of DOC staff
We highl ight four the mes from our surveys of and interviews with staff Each theme suggests areas where DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU staff as well as areas where DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to staff well- being positive aspects of IMU staff culture negative effects of working in the IMU on staff staff desire for input into IMU policies and procedures and specific staff objections to IMU reforms
APPRECIATION FOR IMU STAFF CULTURE
IMU staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their colleagues and with immediate supervisors ndash both in the ir sur vey response s and duri ng i nterviews Nearly 90 percent of correctional officers surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unit rdquo for instance On average staff described being satisfied with their
IMU staff largely like their jobs trust jobs 75 percent said they were mostly or very
their colleagues and immediate satisfied and 64 percent said they would take the supervisors and feel safe at work same job again Likewise 75 percent reported that This satisfaction and professionalism their immediate supervisors frequently asked for can and should be leveraged in their opinions about problems (describing t he implementing IMU reforms frequency as either ldquosometimesrdquo or ldquoalwaysrdquo) And two-thirds of staff (67 percent) reported feeling safe working in the IMU
In our informal conversations and formal interviews with staff we repeatedly observed and heard staff expressing trust and appreciation for their colleagues in the IMU In some cases our presence required additional staffing on the units and many ldquoregularrdquo IMU staff noted how working with staff unfamiliar with IMU routines and relationships was disruptive in contrast to their usual trusting relationship with their ldquoregularrdquo IMU colleagues One staff member rsquos comment succinctly represents the perspectives of correctional officers who appreciate working in the highly controlled IMU environment with trusted partners
I think IMU is one of the safest places to work in the whole prison system I mean theyre locked down 23 out of 24 hours a day youre escorting them with another person theyre in restraints Yeah things can happen Sure the y can make weapons Sure they can do ndash but they can do that out there more easily To me you know what you have in an IMU and you got some ndash at least you got a partner there with you under the circumstances
32
In sum IMU staff largely like their jobs tr ust their colleagues and immediate supervisors and feel safe at work This solid foundation of satisfaction and professionalism is a significant asset to DOC leadership work ing with line staff to communicate about and implement IMU reforms
NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON STA FF OF IMU W ORK
Although staff described feeling safe in the IMU satisfaction with the work and loyalty and trust in their colleagues they also described negative effects of working in the IMU environment especially ongoing negative mental and physical health consequences Among the 90 staff completing surveys the average staff member reported their overall health was good (a rating of 3 out of 5) A significant minority of staff (one quarter) however reported their overall health was poor or fair (a rating of 1 or 2 out of 5) While their self-assessments of their overall health varied staff consistently reported high levels of stress the average staff member reported their overall stress level as moderate (a rating of 2 out of 3) and one -third of all respondents reported the ir overall stress levels as high (a rating of 3 out of 3) Staff consistently reported that these high stress levels affected their overall health 80 percent of staff reported that stress had affected their health either ldquosomerdquo or ldquoa lotrdquo (a rating of 2 or 3 out of 3) in the past year Overall staff thought DOC failed to address correctional officersrsquo physical and mental health concerns they consistently disagreed with positive statements like ldquo DOC provides adequate services to me et correctional officersrsquo physical health needs rdquo Additional investments in supporting staff well-being could be both well received and impactful
Comments on the surveys and our subsequent interviews with staff in IMUs provided context for these overall reports about high stress levels in the IMU First staff perceived having greater ndash and more unreasonable ndash obligations during a workday in the IMU than elsewhere in the prison For example one correctional officer wrote ldquoIMU staff do twice as many duties as regular staff They never get compensated for all the extra wor k and stressrdquo This sentiment of imbalanced workload across units was echoed by another custody staff respondent ldquoStaff are
consistently overworked in the IMUs They are IMU staff identified key stressors required to do a job that requires twice the work of 1 Being overworked by additional a correctional officer working e lsewhere Staff deal
responsibilities with a lot of stress but are still reprimanded for 2 Being institutionally undervalued calling in sickrdquo
and under-supported 3 Needing to be hypervigilant at Second while staff often reported trusting
work and at home collaborative relationships with their immediate supervisors they perceived institutional leadership
as unsympathetic and indifferent to the unique stressors of working (and feeling overworked) in the IMU Specifically correctional officers criticized DOC in general for not providing support
33
for staff and thereby undermining safety in the IMU As one officer said (and m any others echoed) ldquoThis place does not care about staff All they care about is making things look good and keeping the offenders happy at all costs This results in COs sa ying screw it and not caring anymore which makes things unsaferdquo
Third while staff largely reported feeling safe at work in the IMU they also reported being hypervigilant on the job and also at home off the job Correctional officers reported that they were aware of the pervasiveness of risk in their work ldquoWe all have to understand that when we take a job like this anything can happen at any time That is the risk that we all take This job is not for everybodyrdquo Nearly all (98) survey respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they ldquoalways have to keep it in mind that t rouble could happen any timerdquo while at work Moreover respondentsrsquo levels of stress and perceptions of risk were strongly correlated those respondents who reported they worked in ldquodangerous jobsrdquo and were always dealing with ldquosome sort of crisisrdquo were also more likely to report higher stress levels
Importantly staff seemed to struggle with leaving these anxieties hypervigilant states of mind and stressors at work Staff consistently described being on edge and worried about their safety outside of work As one staff member said
I definitely notice like going to hellip fairs and that kind of stuff in the summer with the family hellip Irsquom definitely looking around a lot more Even going to like banks I look around a lot more I constantly ndash my headrsquos constantly on a swivel and Irsquo m in a place I donrsquo t really know Irsquo m definitely looking ndash grocery store Irsquo m constantly looked down ndash standing in the checkout line because there rsquos a million people standing there and yoursquo re constantl y look ing around lik e oh y eah that guyrsquos done time that guy has done time Like it rsquos - you can ndash itrsquos really weird when definitely get a sense for that kind of stuff And definitely keep an eye out
Another described how this habit of ldquolooking aroundrdquo and ldquokeeping an eye outrdquo was both a source of stress and a necessity for safety ldquoMy wife gives me a hard time about it all the time Shes like lsquoDo you ever turn the dirt bag meter off rsquo hellip And it may drive her nuts but i t keeps my family saferdquo One of the most common manifestations of this hypervigilance staff described Messaging about steps WADOC
is taking to value and support was being sure to sit in corners and face out looking at staff is critical some of these doors ldquoIn a restaurant I canrsquo t sit with my back to a steps should involve addressing group of peoplerdquo And another said ldquoI wonrsquo t let people pervasive hypervigilance and its
get behind me rdquo A growing body of literature about effects on stress correctional officer health suggests this pervasive
34
hypervigilance among correctional officers has long-term traumatic effects our data suggests that working in the IMU may exacerbate these effects 11
In sum our surveys of and interviews with staff revealed specific stress ors associated with work in the IMU the pressure of additional responsibilities and feeling overworked a sense of being institutionally undervalued and under -supported and percepti ons of high risk leading to persistent hypervigilance even outside of work These specific sources of stress in turn suggest areas where DOC could intervene to mitigate stress For instance messaging about steps DOC is taking to value and support staff and about DOC awareness of the additional work pressures some reforms entail could mitigate stress improve the culture of IMUs and even facilitate acceptance of future reforms For instance to the extent reforms actually reduce risk o r violence in the IMU communicating this clearly to staff could mitigate some of the hypervigilance that makes their work and home lives stressful
STAFF DESIRE FOR P OLICY INPUT
Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them fr om ldquoheadquartersrdquo In our survey of staff most staff across all facilities (63 percent) said that they ldquooften find it difficult to agree with this Departmentrsquo s policies on important issuesrdquo Likewise in our interviews with correctional officers and serge ants (45 of our 77 staff interviews) the majority (80 percent) reported that they experienced tension and conflict around IMU policies Indeed while three -quarters of staff reported that their immediate supervisors frequently asked for their opinions two-thirds reported that higher level administrators either ldquoneverrdquo or ldquorarelyrdquo asked for the ir opini ons
However when we asked staff to elaborate on what was wrong with IMU policies and reforms they almost always focused on the process by which reforms we re introduced rathe r than on the substance of the policy They described simply being told that a policy had changed without either being asked whether they agreed with the change or understanding why the policy had changed Specifically correctional officers and sergeants complained that administrative decision-makers above them were out of touch with the r eality of cur rent operations ldquoThey just make the decision hellip but we really donrsquo t have any say or influence how those kinds of decision are made They rsquore made by administrators that havenrsquo t been unit staff
11 See Lois James amp Natalie Todak ldquoPrison employment and post-traumatic stress disorder Risk and protective factorsrdquo American Journal of Industrial Medicine Vol 619 (2018) 725-32
35
in a long long time That donrsquo t remember or they forgot where they came fromrdquo Staff interpreted their lack of opportunities for input as some combination of leadership being lazy and uncaring ldquoLik e lsquowhy are they having us do this Donrsquo t they understand that this is a bad idea you knowrsquo You know the option is either they do understand itrsquo s a bad idea and they dont care or they donrsquo t know and theyrsquo re you know canrsquo t be bothered to askrdquo
On the other hand when unit managers or other leadership staff solicited the opinions of line staff about policy implementation the staff tended to be more accepting and less critical of the policy For instance in one facility a staff member described a policy change to allow porters on third shift in restrictive housing and how the sergeant and correctional unit supervisor (CUS) consulted the correctional officers about how to implement the policy ldquoSo what they did is the sergeant and the CUS came and ta lked to the staff and said lsquoWho would you guys recommend They have to be IMS program They have to be level four And they have to infraction-freersquo Fine So we all picked as a group hellip He was super polite model inmaterdquo While the correctional staff we re not involved in the formal policy decision to install porters on third shift administrators made room for correctional officersrsquo input and involvement by allowing them to choose who that person would be By involving correctional officers in that proce ss they increased staff support for and buy-in to the policy change
Indeed our research team heard repeatedly from staff that simply having the opportunity to talk with us about their work express their opinions and reflect on their experiences was a comfort and a relief ldquolike a weight off their shouldersrdquo Staff told us this individually duri ng interviews and communicated this during our de-briefs with unit leadership at the end Staff wanted more input into policy ndashto have
of each site visit in the summer of 201 7 The a chance to air their opinions and to have
eager and thoughtful participation by staff in input into mechanisms of policy
our interviews provides yet another implementation on the ground
indication of their interest in and wi llingness to engage in conversations about policy reform In fact bringing in outside researchers to systematically seek input from staff (as DOC frequently d oes) whether in the form of surveys or interviews might be one way to increase both staff perce ptions that they have a voice in policy processes and their willingness to implement new policies
In sum survey responses interview analyses and informal conversations all suggest that the manner in which reform and policy changes are presented to sta ff matters the more the policy is explained and the more staff input is solicited in the reform process especially as to the details and mechanisms of policy implementation the more likely staff will be to support and facilitate reform implementation
36
STAFF OBJECTIONS TO I MU R EFORMS
While staff most frequently complained about the manner in which reforms were introduced and especially about their lack of input in policy implementation they also described specific objections to reforms ndash largely in terms of the impact these reforms had on their day -to-day work and their percepti ons of whether or not staff safety and well- being were being pr ioritized
First staff perceived many reforms as prioritizing prisoner well-being over staff well-being IMU staff described IMU prisoners as the ldquoworst of the worstrdquo ndash the least deserving of the undeserving And they repeatedly described any new or additional benefits to prisoners ndash whether additional commissary items more time out of cell or more programming opportunities ndash as being risky and harmful to staff In some cases staff perceived the reforms or benefits to prisoners as pushing staff into new job roles for w hich they lacked both time and training For instance one correctional officer said ldquoI mean usually we come here and we have to do our job which is you know the yard showers and all that and you know guys say they program and we donrsquo t have time to figure out what theyrsquo re programming I mean thatrsquo s not our job description rdquo And another correctional officer described feeling as if he was expected to ldquodo more with lessrdquo ldquoYou know the other big thing with the removal of staff is the addition of programs you know So it seems like the classic managerial approach of do more with less and thatrsquos you know never well received by the people that have to do the more with lessrdquo In other words staff tended to see rehabilitative -oriented reforms as both a burden and oppositional to their fundamental job role ndash to maintain safety and security
Second staff perceived reforms addressing individual prisonersrsquo special needs like ext reme mental illness as inconsistent In fact staff repeatedly described individualized treatment as dangerous ndash encouraging prisoners to exploit and manipulate the rules to their own benefit For instance one correctional officer described his objecti ons to a protocol for responding to instances of feces-smear ing in the IMU ldquoIt is a
Staff characterized reforms as inconsistent manipulation point and they figured that out risky and dangerous Avoiding publicly
Hey on a Tuesday and Thursday we donrsquo t contradicting staff and communicating have yard and showers Well I want to take a more systematically about the benefits of shower so Irsquom going to smear feces on t he reform for staff could minimize resistance wall so I can go get my shower Thatrsquo s how that works And we have to do i trdquo Other correctional officers objected to provision of things like a nerf ball for throwing or soap for carving ndash both individualized attempts to address specific behavioral problems ndash as opening the door for other prisoners to make new demands both adding to officersrsquo daily list of obligations and making security harder to maintain
37
Third staff described how reforms prioritizing prisonersrsquo needs undermined their ability to safely manage a difficult population For instance one correctional officer described his frustration with trying to enforce the rules and being undermined or chastised by supervisors who were prioritizing prisoner well- being
Lots of the time we rsquore more nervous about getting in trouble for refusing guys If you ask them (about) yard and shower and they donrsquo t answer and you ask them multiple times and raising your voice to hopefully get their reaction then turn around and you refuse them and then all of a sudden they rsquore bitching and moaning about it and then all of a sudden now theyrsquo re getting it Itrsquo s just one of those things where it gets discouraging but it rsquos ndash I can only do my job
Another correctional officer described frustration with reforms seeking to limit the imposition of infractions and sanctions within the IMU ldquoNow you try to correct an inmate rsquos actions ndash Irsquo ve seen a lot of my infractions get thrown out not even processed hellip to where wersquo re not holding the people responsible And that becomes a safety risk for us Because the inmates donrsquo t show that same respectrdquo In sum correctional officers emphasize consistency as a tool for both maintaining their own authority and minimizing manipulation by prisoners
Staff did not simply describe how and why they objected to IMU reforms They also described how they resisted these reforms undermining policy implementation by ldquo burningrdquo prisoners on out-of-cell time breaking rules adhering to the letter rather than the spirit of a policy and encouraging grievances against leadership Often correctional officers justifi ed non-compliance or undermining policies as the only way to compensate for a lack of resources such as staff shortages and time limitations during a shift When describing this kind of undermining of policies interviewees contextualized these strategie s as coping strategies necessary to mitigate resource issues staff explained that additional programming and movement required more time and careful planning over the course of a shift For example one correctional officer described how he purposefully tried to reduce movement during his shift by asking about yards and showers as early as possible He elaborated about this tactic
It often results in the pri soner fi ling a gr ievance with the i nstitution Howeve r custody staff are aware of this and encourage these kinds of grievances as they provide evidence for their argument that administration are making unrealistic demands on them with the introduction of new policies and programs in restrictive housing units
Not all IMU correctional officers were so resistant to reform however For instance another officer (a sergeant) described IMU policies as changing frequently but characterized adapting to those changes as part of his job ldquoI adapt pretty well with the change You have to around
38
here Itrsquo s changing every day Whether itrsquo s a good change or not yoursquo re going to have your personal opinion and I sometimes donrsquo t agree but again Irsquo m a person who adapts to changerdquo This same office r in fact articulately described the importance of orienting re spectfully rather than punitive ly to prisoners in the IMU
I just always treat them as I would want to be treated or how I was raised which is with communication and just being respectful Irsquoll try to give you an example Like somebody will say lsquo That guyrsquos not going to get out of his cellrsquo Irsquo m going to say lsquo Whyrsquo Hersquo s going to say lsquo Because he was arguing with me and he rsquos a threat nowrsquo I go lsquoWell why not work wi th the guy and talk to him to tr y to come up with a better resolution rsquo Rather than just no movement and pi ss him off some more because no movementrsquo s not going to teach him any different than he rsquos already doing I mean if yoursquo re swearing and cussing at me you got your arms out and your fists going at me thatrsquo s not going to h elp you by having no movement Talking it outrsquos going to help you more So Irsquo m more of a ndash I guess Irsquom a littl e more libe ral on that part
While some staff we interviewed described this kind of ldquorespectfulrdquo or ldquoliberalrdquo approach as ldquodrinking the K ool-Aidrdquo of reform arguments coming from headquarters plenty of others asserted at least acceptance of if not also support for the ldquorespectfulrdquo approach As David Lovell noted comparing interviews he conducted in the early 2000s to those he conducted as part of our team in 2017 ldquoA hell of a lot has changed I did not hear the same stories about neglect and abuserdquo 12
In sum understanding the specific objections staff raised to existing reforms is critical to minimizing resistance and encouraging successful implementation of future reforms Indeed the specific objections staff raised to reforms suggest important areas where communication between line staff and supervisors could be clarified and improved
bull The perceived contradiction between rehabilitation and saf ety could be acknowledged and addressed in communicating with staff about reforms
bull The possibilities for simultaneously improving both prisoner and staff well- being through reform could be emphasized
12 Conversation with David Lovell Feb 24 2021 notes on file with author
39
bull Supervisors and non-custody staff advocating for indiv idualized interventions need to (1) address line staff concerns with inconsistency in treatment and policy and (2) strategize to avoid undermining line staffrsquo s authority in day-to-day interactions
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS
In this section we focus on our analysis of the interviews we conducted with a random sample of 106 maximum custody status IMU prisoners in the summer of 2017 and re -interviews conducted with 80 of these participants still incarcerated in the summer of 20 18 Where relevant we also include some findings from the 225 surveys we collected from prisoners in IMUs in the spring of 2017 Our random sample of 106 prisoner interview participants had a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU and mean of 5 prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Forty -two percent of our participants were white 12 percent were African American 23 percent were Latino 23 percent were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differences between our participants and all people held in IMU s at the time of our interviews People in the general prison population at the time of our interviews however were notably different than those held in IMU as they are older less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang -affiliated and less likely to be Latino
In this section we highlight six themes from our interviews with prisoners Each suggests areas where Washington DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU prisoners as well as areas wher e DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to prisoner well-being trust access to programs social contact policies health (both physical and mental) long-term management challenges and reentry
TRUSTING STA FF TO B E RESPONSIVE
A central theme of our interviews was that prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food care and safety Prisoners consistently expressed confidence that things like kites grievances and mail would be handled and delivered in good faith They understood processes for communicating needs and concerns and expected to receive timely (if not always
satisfactory) responses to their requests and Prisoners in WADOC frequently complaints Indeed when we asked prisoners if they described experiences of basic
trusted staff from correctional officers to healthcare procedural justice they understood providers they said things like ldquoI got a lot of respect for the rules trusted processes and themrdquo and ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo and ldquothey are just doing their mostly respected staff jobrdquo While prisoners did not describe staff as friends or
advocates neither did they describe them as enemies or opponents This is surprising In many prison settings in which our team has conducted research we have witnessed and documented
40
more adversarial relationships between prisoners and staff with less trust that policies and procedures will be followed devoid of respect expressed in simple phrases like ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo
To be clear prisoners frequently complained about the answers they received to kites the quality of medical care they received and the way some staff treated them But their complaints tended to focus on procedures and policies rather than on individual instances of mistreatment This suggests a baseline of trust in process The idea that rules are transparently knowable and fairl y appl ied is often called procedural justice people who experience procedural justice are more likely to pe rceive rules and institutions as legitimate and therefore to follow those rules and comply with institutional policies13 The baseline of trust ndash and associated perception of procedural justice ndash we documented among IMU prisoners reflects an existing infrastructure and institutional culture that can facilitate further reform like sharing new information and gaining buy -in for new policies and procedures
PROGRAMS ACCESS CHALLENGES AND UNREALIZED POTENTIAL
In our visits to IMUs across Washington over two years and in our conversations with prisoners and staff we learned about a dizzying arr ay of programs available to prisoners in the IMU A2A ACT chemical dependency reading groups and in-cell course work Although prisoners were often eager to participate in these programs both in order to make their IMU time productive and in order to fulfill the requirements for release from the IMU they were frustrated with long program waitlists Prisoners described wait times of six months or more in order to get into programs or courses they were required to take before leaving the IMU They under stood that a variety of factors contributed to these long wait times including time to be transferred to the
designated programming IMU limited Prisoners experienced waiting for I MU- number of seats available for each program based programs as extra punishment and program duration WADOC could communicate more clearly with prisoners about how programming For many participants waiting to get into waitlists are organized and how waiting programs was the most frustrating aspect of affects IMU stays and good time their housing in IMU because they
experienced the wait times as an extra punishment ndash one they feared would extend their overall time in prison ndash actually making the day-to-day conditions of their confinement harder to bear First prisoners worried that they were either losing good time while waiting for programming or receiving additional
13 Tom R Tyler ldquoProcedural Justice Legitimacy and the Effective Rule of Lawrdquo Crime amp J ustice Vol 30 283-357 (2003)
41
punishments by being ldquopushed bac krdquo onto longer wait lists As time spent in the IMU can impact prisonersrsquo early release dates long progr am wai t times wer e pe rceived as an e xtra punishment essentially adding to a prison sentence This is a place where DOC could build on the foundation of trust and procedural justice described in the prior section to simply communicate more clearly with prisoners about how waitlists are constructed and whether and how they are impacting good time and release dates
Second prisoners described the time waiting for programs as not just frustrating because it amounted to more time spe nt in the IMU and sometimes eve n more time in prison but also ldquotaxing mentallyrdquo They described waiting in the IMU as ldquodead time rdquo leaving one prisoner feeling like a ldquodog in a cage rdquo and another feeling ldquoanger all the timerdquo Yet another prisoner described doing the same set of packets three different times while waiting for a spot in face -to-face class like A2A
Once prisoners were able to enroll in programs they often found the content disappointing in specific ways too r epetitious (ldquothe same content over and over againrdquo) not compatible with daily life in the IMU and structured to prior itize a pragmatic attitude over a learning mindset One prisoner described this pragmatic mindset ldquoIf they put them in the Hole ndash they rsquore going to do their Hole time they rsquore going to their little program
WADOC has built an but theyrsquore going to do what they want to do Theyrsquore impressive infrastructure to already set in their ways and nothing rsquos really going to support IMU programming but change themrdquo And another explained ldquoThey force it the content of those programs
upon you which automatically makes an individual want could be improved to be more to rebel rdquo Prisoners also noted the tensions between relevant to IMU prisoners what programs teach and the challenges participants face in the general prison population For many the e mphasis on be havioral change clashed with a prison environment that hindered application of pro-social skills and strategies As one prisoner said ldquo But letrsquos be honest this isnrsquo t ndash it didnt help you didnrsquo t change you nonerdquo Another explained that people often made -up scenarios for role-playing interactions just to complete the program rather than actually engaging with real-life experiences and events
In addition to these general critiques of IMU programs as (1) prioritizing just getting through in order to get out of the IMU and (2) not acknowledging the everyday challenges of prison life prisoners described more specific shortcoming of curricula In some cases prisoners said they had to complete too much of the curriculum alone in their cells ldquoItrsquos meant to be a program where itrsquos supposed to be done with other people where you can sit in a group and talk And they have us do it in our cells So that right there itself I mean how does that work rdquo In other cases prisoners described the programs as loosely adapted from programs designed for juveniles in fact a number of participants had experienced the same curriculum while
42
incarcerated as juveni les Prisoners repeatedly expressed a hope that the curriculum could be more tailored to the adult setting Prisoners also noted that program materials were not always translated for non-English speakers or useful for prisoners who were illiterate In these instances programming was counterproductive to the goals of reform
While participants were critical of the programming they expressed this criticism in the context of wanting to use their IMU time productively being eager for classes and learning opportunities and appreciating the good- faith efforts of DOC in providing programming opportunities Indeed DOC is in a particularly positive position having developed the infrastructure for programming in the IMU the personnel to staff this space and even the interest among prisoners to take advantage of programming Figuring out how to get more meaningful content into this existing infrastructure should be relatively easy compared to the immense work that has already been done to build the infrastructure for and interest in programming among both prisoners and staff
SOCIAL CONTACT POLICIES
In the restrictive c onditions of the IMU one set of policies was both especially troubling to prisoners and especially likely to jeopardize their well-being during and after their IMU placements policy r estrictions on whom they could be in contact with while in the IMU and practical barriers to making contact with even those people on their permitted contact lists
Specifically prisoner s frequently told us that while in the IMU they were only permitted to receive visits from immediate family members parents siblings legal spouses and chi ldren Prisoners understood DOCrsquo s definition of family as excluding unwed partners children prisoners are participating in raisin g who were not legally or biologically their own close friends and other individuals playing important roles in prisonersrsquo lives While there may be
many valid security and management reasons for Prisoners experienced barriers to limiting visitation for IMU residents the immediate -communication ndash especially restricted family-only rules in the IMU impose additional visitation possibilities and limited
layers of isolation on prisoners who have no phone access ndash as some of the
immediate family those who have a strong hardest parts of doing IMU time Both connection with extended family members (eg prisonersrsquo mental health and their re-aunts uncles cousins) and those who have entry prospects deteriorate when
family ties and social bonds fray nurtured strong bonds with friends colleagues or mentors For instance one prisoner participant
who had been in foster care described his frustration with not being able to have a visit with a critical mentor ldquoI have a mentor from the streets who works in a non-profit center for LGBTQ people Hersquo s not my immediate relative so he canrsquo t come here to visit me rdquo Even when
43
prisoners had immediate family who we re e ligible to visit geographic di stance and une xpected lockdowns thwarted visitation plans T he prisoners we interviewed repeatedly identified visitation protocols and distance as two primary factors preventing face -to-face contact with support networks during periods of isolation
Indeed practical barriers including both the location of the IMUs a nd the challenges of regularly accessing the phone in the IMU also disrupted IMU residentsrsquo abilities to maintain connections with their outside support networks While prisoners on mainline may place a phone call throughout various hours each day ndash except for during count and meals ndash telephone access in the IMU is reduced to one hour five times a week during recreational time In the IMU this recreational time varies daily and might not occur at all on certain days of the week Even when prisoners did get into the yard they complained that the phones were unreliable a line would be dead or the person on the other end of the line would not be able to hear them for instance So a prisoner wishing to speak regularly even to an immediate family member l ike a child or spouse might not be able to maintain any kind of consistent communication As one participant described
When I was in isolation last time that put tension [on my marriage] My wife and I were used to having three phone calls a day and we were al ways se nding emails back and forth and getting contact visits on a weekly basis When I got [placed in solitary confinement] little by little I noticed that there was distance growing between us hellip My marriage didnrsquo t work out after that
These rule-based and practical barriers to social contact and the resulting frayed familial and social networks have documented consequences for prisonersrsquo well-being in and out of the IMU Among the random sample of prisoners we interviewed the weaker prisonersrsquo familial attachments the more likely they were to have mental health problems Of those prisoners who reported strong familial attachments only 15 percent had a history of self-harm But of those prisoners who did not report strong familial attachments 85 percent had a history of self -harm14 Indeed our analysis suggests that maintaining social bonds is critical to surviving time in the IMU Strong social bonds both allow prisoners to embody roles as part of social webs beyond that of ldquo convictrdquo and provide material and emotional support advocacy and psychological stability A robust body of social science confirms this finding docume nting how
14 To calculate this we linked histories of self-harm from BPRS and medical records (a yesno binary variable) to interview transcripts In coding in terview transcripts we identified those participants who had described having ldquostrongrdquo family b onds and m aintaining re gular family c ommunications and w e identified those participants who described having limited or no communication with family
44
social bonds facilitate successful re-entry after prison and l ong-term criminal desistance15 In sum facilitating the maintenance of existing social bonds for prisoners in the IMU will likely mitigate the mental health impacts of the restrictive conditions and facilitate more successful re-entry into the general prison population and society
One possible way to facilitate maintenance of social bonds could be through provision of tablets i n the IMU In fact in our year -two interviews prisoners described being able to communicate with the outside world ndash especially with JPAY players they had missed in the IMU ndash as the greatest form of freedom post-IMU During our second-year interviews with prisoners no longer in the IMU several participants we re even compelled to retrieve their JPAY players to show to us The player proved critical to re -entry facilitating immediate contact with prisonersrsquo friends and family Such communication was
IMU prisoners described JPAY players especially important for those whose loved ones as critical to easing their re-entry into lived out of state or could not visit in-person And the general prison population
the JPAY technology especially facilitated Providing some access to tablets in intergenerational communication with younger the IMU could mitigate some of the family members ndash like nieces and nephews ndash who frayed social bonds prisoners are less inclined to handwrite letters or talk on the describe experiencing there phone Former IMU prisoners described writing electronic messages sharing and saving photos and engaging in video calls By providing access to the outside world JPAY players gave prisoners an opportunity to reflect on process and express their experiences to those they cared about most As one participant explained ldquo Like itrsquos easier to text than write than actually ndash lsquo cause yoursquo re able to take a moment reflect on what you want to say than when yoursquore having a conversation So itrsquo s a lot easier It also builds relationshipsrdquo JPAY players were also a source of entertainment for prisoners in (re)constructing their daily routines Being able to listen to music or play games on their devices
15 Cochran JC ldquoBreaches in the wall Imprisonment social support and recidivismrdquo Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 512 (2014) 200-229 Cochran JC and Mears DP ldquoSocial isolation and inmate behavior A conceptual framework for theorizing prison visitation and guiding and assessing researchrdquo Journal of Criminal Justice 414 (2013) 252-261 Liu S Pickett JT and B aker T ldquoInside the black box Prison visitation the costs of offending and inmate social capitalrdquo Criminal Justice Policy Review 278 (2016) 766-790 Martinez DJ and Christian J ldquoThe familial relationships of former prisoners Examining the link between residence and informal support mechanismsrdquo Journal of Contemporary E thnography 382 (2009) 201-224 Mills A and Codd H ldquoPrisoners families and offender management Mobilizing social capitalrdquo Probation Journal 551 (2008) 9-24 Naser RL and La Vigne NG ldquoFamily support in the prisoner reentry process Expectations and realitiesrdquo Journal of Offender Rehabilitation 431 (2006) 93-106 Swanson C Lee CB Sansone FA and Tatum KM ldquoPrisonersrsquo perceptions of father-child relationships and social supportrdquo American Journal of Criminal Justice 373 (2012) 338-355 Wallace D Fahmy C Cotton L Jimmons C McKay R Stoffer S and Syed S ldquoExamining the role of familial support d uring prison and after r elease on post-incarceration mental healthrdquo International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 601 (2016) 3-20
45
helped break up the monotony as prisoners re -adjusted to general population Players also helped prisoners plan for the future whether org anizing their legal or other personal affairs
That said p risoners also described problems with JPAY players For many prisoners the costs of the players and video messaging were prohibitive (even if chea per than travel costs for in- person visits) P risoners who only took advantage of the JPAY kiosks wished for the increased communication with family and friends facilitated by an individual player JPAY expenses create inherent inequities in communication which are in turn likely to affect re -entry J PAY use is also contingent upon technological capacity For instance many participants shared stories of frustration and anxiety when they could not use their player after the prison Wi-Fi went down
In sum the communication and entertainment potentials of tablets make the devices valuable to prisoners adjusting to life outside of the IMU and might also repair social bonds otherwise frayed by IMU placements Acce ss costs and capacity however would have to be addressed in expanding the benefits of tablets to pr isoners during and post-IMU The use of JPAY players (or other tablets) during IMU placement is worth further consideration To be clear tablets are not an appropriate replacement for in- person visitation even in the IMU they simply have potential as an additional resource to further support the social contacts and bonds that mitigate the harms of restrictive housing
HEALTH
Our interviews with IMU prisoners and especially our systematic applica tion of the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale during these interviews established that time in the IMU has significant physical and mental health consequences for prisoners In two articles published in leading public health journals the American Journal of Public He alth and PLOS ONE we detail the mental and physical health consequences of IMU time we include those articles as Appendices D and E respectively and we summarize the fin dings here
First prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of psychiatr ic symptoms suicide attempts and incidents of self-harm and were more
We found high rates of serious mental health than twice as likely to have a serious problems in the IMU mental illness designation as prisoners in
bull 1 in 4 IMU prisoners had clinically significant the general prison population Our initi al symptoms of depression and anxiety sample of 106 participants had a mean bull 1 in 2 IMU prisoners had clinically significant BPRS rating of 37 and a median rati ng of psychiatric distress 33 (out of a possible range from 24 to bull IMU prisoners were 2x as likely as GP 168) suggesting mild psychiatric prisoners to have an SMI designation symptoms among the study population
46
at the time of our interviews Analysis of individual BPRS items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms Further analysis of BPRS factors (measuring 3-4 symptoms commonly associated with one another) as opposed to individual items provided additional evidence of clinically significant psychiatric distress in as much as half of the population sampled as with the depression-anxiety-guilt-somatization (DAGS) factor See Table 2 below for a summary of these findings Importantly the BPRS assesses only symptoms experienced in the last two weeks so BPRS scores may well undercount psychiatric symptoms experienced intermittently over longer periods
Administrative data support the finding of long-term psychological distress Among our respondents 19 percent had serious mental illness (SMI) designations 22 percent had a documented suicide attempt and 18 percent had documentation of other self-harm all at some point during their incarceration either before or during their time in the IMU Moreover respondents with SMI designations were more likely to report positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms than non-SMI respondents (See Table 3 in the AJPH article for more details) These findings support the validity of the BPRS assessments
Qualitative interview data revealed symptoms not otherwise captured by the BPRS and medical files Two classes of symptoms were reported by a majority of respondents toll of being in the IMU (80 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 359 times) and the psychological consequences of social isolation (73 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 192 times) Two additional symptoms were as prevalent as other clinically significant BPRS items like anxiety references to sensory hypersensitivity (16 of respondents mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Given these findings in year two follow-up interviews with prisoner participants we also included PC-PTSD-5 instrument questions to assess the prevalence and severity of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Within the month preceding the interview more than 40 percent of participants (44 of 79) indicated 3 or more symptoms of PTSD the baseline score for establishing a probable PTSD diagnosis As discussed further in the re-entry section below these symptoms of PTSD were closely linked to earlier experiences in the IMU
Second prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of physical health problems associated with their confinement in the IMU In 2017 15 percent of interview participants reported having clinically significant somatic concerns (concerns ldquoover present bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80 respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 percent reported clinically significant ratings of somatic concerns Of those who reported a clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were re-interviewed in 2018 25 percent indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic
47
concerns in 2018 Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 percent reported clinically significant somatic concerns compared to just 8 percent of those housed in the general prison population While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
Table 2 BPRS Symptom and Factor Prevalence 2017 and 2018
2017 (N=106) IMU 2018 (N=28) Non IMU 2018 (N=52) - Symptoms16 Depression 2450 2500 1538
(n=26) (n=7) (n=8) Anxiety 2450 3214 2885
(n=26) (n=9) (n=15) Somatic Concern 1510 2143 769
(n=16) (n=6) (n=4) Guilt 1790 1786 769
(n=19) (n=5) (n=4) Hostility 1130 1786 1731
(n=12) (n=5) (n=9) Hallucinations 940 1429 1154
(n=10) (n=4) (n=6) Excitement 1040 1429 769
(n=11) (n=4) (n=4) Factors17
Positive 1600 1790 1350
(n=17) (n=5) (n=7) Negative 470 360 380
(n=5) (n=1) (n=2) DAGS 4910 4290 4810
(n=52) (n=12) (n=25) Mania 1700 1430 1730
(n=18) (n=4) (n=9)
16 Only clinically significant symptoms (rating of 4 or higher) that were reported by 10 or more of the sample are presented 17 Factors combine 3-4 different symptoms commonly associated with one another Positive = hallucinations unusual thought content and conceptual disorganization Negative = blunted affect emotional withdrawal and motor retardation DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization Mania = elevated mood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement
48
concerns in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 percent confidence level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test)
Data from our 225 initial surveys collected from IMU prisoners also indicated high rates of concerns with physical health among the IMU population Of the 225 survey respondents 63 percent expressed health concerns 48 percent were taking medication 17 percent had arthritis and 8 percent had experienced a fall in solitary confinement And 82 percent replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo while in the IMU
Based on these high rates of reported concerns with physical health both among survey respondents and on the BPRS assessments of interview subjects we systematically analyzed all references to physical health concerns in the prisoner interview transcripts Through this analysis we identified three pervasive physical health concerns among IMU prisoners skin irritations weight fluctuations and musculoskeletal pain
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They understood these conditions as being directly associated with poor air and water quality irritating hygiene products and a lack of sun exposure inherent to IMU conditions of confinement Likewise participants described the interrelationship between a lack of nutritious food or adequate calories in the IMU feelings of lethargy and being too overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day and rapid weight fluctuations experienced during periods spent in the IMU Participants described their weight going down with regular and social exercise routines and going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exercise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations highlight the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU Finally participants spoke frequently about one specific chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to them in the IMU
In addition to specifying these physical health concerns participants described multiple barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU First prisoner respondents worried about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response if staff ultimately deemed
We found common patterns of physical health problems in the IMU bull Skin irritations bull Weight fluctuations bull Musculoskeletal pain
Barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU bull Fear of incurring more IMU time bull Lack of privacy bull $4 co-pay
49
their health issue to be non- emergent This fear prevented them from seeking care even when they were experiencing concern ing symptoms like heart palpitations Second prisoner respondents worried about the lack of privacy available to them if they sought or needed any form of healthcare needing to hand a medical kite to a correctional officer passing by needing to speak with a nurse at ldquocell-frontrdquo in e arshot of other s or submitting to a restrained ldquoescortrdquo to a medical treatment area The lack of privacy was a particular deterrent to seeking mental health care due to stigma around mental illness in prison and fear of b eing targeted by other prisoners as a result of their seeking mental health treatment Third prisoner respondents were dissuaded from seeking care by the $4 co-pay for a non-emergency medical appointment (for non-indigent prisoners) Because of IMU polici es capping overall prisoner spending for any need (whether healthcare food or toiletries) this $4 co-pay represented a larger proportion of their available money in the IMU than in the general population and so represented an additional barrier to seeki ng care from within the IMU Physical and mental health concerns in the IMU might be mitigated and reduced by addressing some of these barriers to IMU residents seeking and accessing care
LONG-TERM MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES IN TH E IMU
While we have focused in much of this section on common and prevalent experiences across our random sample of interview subjects a small subset of the people we interviewed had different experiences in the IMU and presented different challenges to DOC For instance we interviewed IMU pri soners who had re peatedly assaul ted staff repeatedly se riously harmed themselves or repeatedly committed serious rule violations as soon as they were released from the IMU in self-described efforts at sabotage In other words these prisoners r eflect a small group of those with ongoing or severe behavioral challenges DOC officials were actively engaged with following the behavioral trajectories of these prisoners meeting with them individually and investigating options to shorten their time in IMU This is laudable
Another population that presents serious long-Washington is well-positioned to pilot term management challenges for DOC are STG -and promote new initiatives focusing identified prisoners Among the random sample of on viable placement and programming
IMU prisoners we interviewed nearly one -third alternatives for IMU prisoners with (29 percent) had been in the IMU for at least one ongoing severe behavioral challenges year Of these more than half (55 percent) were
STG members or affiliates Of these three were awaiting out- of-state transfer due to ongoing serious STG-related activity Again these are small numbers of prisoners but they represent significant management challenges absorbing DOC time and resources and driving up key restrictive housing metrics like average lengths of stay frequency of cycling in and out of the IMU and the racial disproportionality of IMU placements (see Figures 8 and 9 above)
50
To date much solitary confinement reform nationwide has ignored such difficult cases focusing instead on the more widespread over-use of solitary confinement for prisoners who have not committed serious rule violations as with prisoners serving indefinite solitary confinement terms in California prisons due to gang status labels (prior to the Ashker reforms) or prisoners who have spent extended terms in solitary confinement for non-serious or single infractions Having successfully reduced IMU populations (albeit with some fluctuations) and lengths of IMU terms Washington is well-positioned to pilot and promote new initiatives focusing on viable placement and programming alternatives for IMU prisoners with ongoing severe behavioral challenges As Washington officials know too well no single solution is likely to address the wide range of behavioral challenges among those individuals who have experienced repeated extended IMU placements
One commonality we noticed among IMU ldquolong-termersrdquo was that they often felt they had nothing (more) to lose through misbehavior whether they had histories of serious violence against themselves or others To the extent Washington officials are able to provide hope and resources to these prisoners these prisonersrsquo calculations about the desirability of violence shift For instance providing one IMU prisoner with a nerf ball to throw another with soap to carve and scheduling weekly headquarter check-ins with a third at least anecdotally reduced misbehavior and violence In future research we look forward to further analyzing both these specific cases and broader DOC efforts to address individual and group behavioral challenges
RE-ENTRY
IMU prisoners overwhelmingly looked forward to being released back into the general prison population They associated re-entering the general population with improved access to clothing food hygiene products exercise programming and medical care And transitioning back to the general population offered opportunities to feel ldquohumanrdquo again ldquoWell it allows you to have contact It allows you to be human It allows you to see what people do on a daily basis that come from the field or to work and allow me to sub-act that Allowing you to copy what is considered humanrdquo
But re-entry came with challenges and anxieties too Prisoners reported significant difficulty readjusting to regular social contact upon leaving solitary confinement Transitioning to multiple-person housing or a particularly bustling unit is challenging to navigate after having extremely limited interactions with people for months or years Something as simple as shaking hands represents a significant amount of contact for someone just released from IMU Prisoners also develop different privacy expectations while in isolation which can make re-entry feel like a ldquothousand eyes are watching yourdquo Re-adjusting to life in general population also entailed a level of choice and personal
51
responsibility not typically exercised in isolation prisoners described the challen ges of anticipating transfer to a new location figuring out the day -to-day processes of their new unit and acclimating to the work and social norms of a new group of correctional staff and fellow prisoners Transitioning back into the general population with new norms and fewer restrictions disrupted the consistent (and sometimes rigid) routines prisoners had developed to manage their time in solitary confinement
BPRS and PTSD scores confirmed ongoing Mental health symptoms experienced challenges with the mental health problems in the IMU persisted after release prisoners experienced in the IMU For along with new symptoms indicative instance in year -two interviews of PTSD Former IMU prisoners
therefore face ongoing mental health respondents not in the IMU experienced needs and challenges higher rates of clinically significant anxiety
(as scored through the BPRS) than they had in the IMU (See Table 2 above) And prisoners in our study not in the IMU in year two frequently described extreme sensitivity to any amount of noise feeling overwhelmed by the amount of movement and stimulation they experience d in the general population intrusive thoughts (like triggered memories and flashbacks) and an inability to stop experiencing symptoms of guilt and blame Each of these experiences are consistent with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) While IMU p risoners were often just trying to make it through upon release back into the ge neral prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and physical challenges first experienced in the IMU The l ack of sensor y stimulation and social interaction in the IMU seemingly promotes rumination and fixation on traumatic disturbing or distressing memories and this rumination lingers even after leaving the IMU
One prisoner respondentrsquo s description of this constellation of symptoms which make the transition from the IMU to the general prison population difficult is representa tive
When you isolate us you kind of deprive us of those sensories everyday you know Like since Irsquove been here hellip Irsquo ve noticed like loud noise makes me feel I donrsquo t like it If therersquo s too much stuff going on I find myself I get all irritated If ther ersquos a l ot of people I ge t weirded out if the rersquos too much activity going on I kind of canrsquo t be around it Itrsquo s just it paranois me I donrsquot know why Itrsquo s only happened since Irsquo ve been in here this time I think itrsquo s because Irsquo ve been isolated for as long a s I have been Things that Irsquom not used to k ind of throws me through a loop
Likewise staff described how they observed these adjustment difficulties in prisoners leaving the IMU
52
I think theyrsquore uncomfortable being out of restraints around people hellip I donrsquot think they know what to do For example I used to watch them come out of IMU and in general population housing unit theyrsquod come to me and it would be strange for them to hellip have somebody walk up and say ldquoHey man howrsquos it goingrdquo and touch them Theyrsquore not used to people touching them hellip All that noise and all those people around them and having to share a cell with somebody and have somebody so close theyrsquore not used to that Those are effects of long-term restrictive housing I think they improve but ndash I mean Irsquove watched that happen over and over again
Prisoners contemplating release from the IMU not into the general prison population but instead onto the streets experienced significant anxiety about this looming transition As one prisoner described
Most people get released to the streets get a chance to go to hellip at least get out of the hole because they donrsquot want to release people to the streets from the hole because that causes safety risks For me they donrsquot have any options hellip My DOC officer is coming to pick me up itrsquos not like I wanted it to happen but hersquoll probably put me in handcuffs until I get to the office and actually wait to release me because until Irsquom out of their custody Irsquom still a security risk18
While we know DOC sought to ensure prisoners transitioned from the IMU into general population prior to release to the streets this was not possible in every case Understanding the challenges prisoners experience upon leaving the IMU and their anxieties about release are therefore especially important to designing transition and release plans
Our analysis shows that solitary confinement produces a unique cluster of mental health symptoms ndash including but not limited to cognitive decline anxiety depression hallucinations and PTSD19 Our interviews revealed an additional layer of difficulty for prisoners reentering the
18 While we sought to interview prisoners who had paroled between our year-one and year-two interviews we were not able to make contact with any of these individuals and so cannot systematically analyze actual experiences of release-to-the streets
19 Arrigo B A amp Bullock J L (2008) The psychological effects of solitary confinements on prisoners in supermax units Reviewing what we know and recommending what should change International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 52(6) 622-640 doi 1011770306624X07309720 Grassian S (2006) Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Washington Journal of Law amp Policy 22 325ndash383 Grassian S amp Friedman N (1986) Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confinement International Journal of
53
general prison population (and mainstream society) from the IMU The more time a person spends in solitary confinement the more difficult their transition back into the general prison population Importantly our analyses of rates of IMU placement in DOC (discussed in particular in the first findings section of this report on patterns in restrictive housing use) suggest that (1) large numbers of prisoners experience IMU placements during their stay in DOC and (2) many prisoners cycle in and out of the IMU This suggests that these long -term effects of IMU placements may be common if not pervasive among DOC prisoners
In sum prisoners described and sta ff observed common challenges transitioning from the IMU back into the general prison population or back onto the streets Still those prisoners who had spent extended periods of time (years rather than months) in the IMU but who were ulti mately able to transition back into the gene ral prison populati on descr ibed significantly impr oved quality of life and well-being in their new surroundings
For instance our team interviewed one prisoner who spent a total of one year in the IM U When our team re -interviewed this prisone r i n 2018 he was at a camp at the lowest security level in the system grateful for his ldquofreedom rdquo back in communication with his family and feeling ready for his looming release date (within the year of the interview ) ldquoEverythingrsquos turned around real fast from being in the cell to just being almost like out in the world Theyre just letting you know that Im getting closer and closer to finally getting outrdquo Our team interviewed another prisoner who spent a total of two years in the IMU during which time he had no contact with his family and had engaged in repeated serious self-harm resulting in multiple surgeries When our team re -interviewed this prisoner in 2018 he was living in the general prison population with a cellmate had re -established a relationship with his young daughter While prisoners face ongoing mental
and her mother and had not engaged in self-harm health needs following IMU stays
in months many also appreciate increased family connections exhibit better behavior
In many cases prisoners pointed to a specific staff and experience overall improvements member who had gotten to know them expressed in well-being after leaving the IMU concern for their well-being and advocated for targeted interventions like family contact or transitional programs to facilitate transitioning out of the IMU Such targeted individualized treatment interventions often coordinated by Program Managers at the institution- level or the Mission Housing Administrator from
Law and P sychiatry 8(1) 49-65 Haney C amp Lynch M (1997) Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and so litary c onfinement New York Review of Law and Social Change 23 101-195
54
headquarters were critical to intervening to get some of the longer-term IMU prisoners back into the general prison population For instance one Program Manager said
I follow up with all of my offenders When they leave and go to the other institution after theyrsquove been out of here for three months Irsquoll go and visit them at their other institutions and see how theyrsquore doing Wersquove had a couple thatrsquove gone through the program twice and a lot of people are looked down on that and go lsquoOh if they didnrsquot learn the first time why is he going to learn a second timersquo Well hey it might take somebody four or five times before they get it Especially if theyrsquore between that 28 to 38 age range
Likewise the Mission Housing Administrator who follows individual maximum-custody IMU placements throughout the entire Washington DOC system noted ldquoWe have hundreds of success stories of people who have gotten out of IMUsrdquo He said he ldquoget(s) calls from moms every once in awhilerdquo thanking him for giving their sons a chance by letting them out of the IMU And he added he has ldquoa drawer full of letters from people saying thank yourdquo
Such stories stand as important reminders that even prisoners once thought to be unmanageable can improve outside of the IMU and learn to thrive in our communities even in spite of the many documented mental health challenges associated with having spent time in solitary confinement
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021
While data collection for this research project formally concluded in 2018 reform efforts within Washington DOC continued The Mission Housing Administrator continued to oversee all cases of long-term maximum custody IMU placements and to develop individualized interventions ndash from regular phone calls and exchanges of letters to facilitating more family contact ndash to assist in transitioning people out of the IMU Between 2018 and 2020 Washington DOC partnered with the Vera Institute of Justice to pursue further restrictive housing reform (and also joined a partnership with AMEND to improve overall correctional culture)20 In 2021 Vera Institute reported that overall restrictive housing use decreased by nearly ten percent between 2018
20 See PRESS RELEASE The Washington State Department of Corrections Partners with the Vera Institute to Focus on Restricted Housing Reforms May 16 2019 httpswwwdocwagovnews201905162019phtm
55
and 2020 and average and medium lengths of stay in IMU on maximum custody status decreased significantly by 18 and 33 percent respectively 21
Although the onset of COVID in early 2020 set som e of Washington DOC continues these restrictive housing reduction efforts back Washingt on to develop and implement DOC continues to implement additional reforms designed to strategies to reduce reliance
(1) further reduce reliance on restrictive housing on restrictive housing and (eliminating the sanction of disciplinary segregation improve conditions of shortening the maximum time in administrative segregation confinement in IMUs from 47 to 30 days implementing ldquoearned time creditsrdquo for
people assigned to maximum custody and piloting new hearings processes to divert ser iously mentally ill prisoners from restrictive housing ) and (2) improve conditions of confinement within restrictive housing units (increasing out- of-cell time implementing plans to t rack these increases through a program called Pipe permitting a broader range of visitors beyond immediate family and notifying emergency contacts when prisoners are placed in restrictive housing) In addition to these reforms Washington DOC has been and plans to continue ldquore -purposingrdquo IMU units for other less restrictive ldquomissionsrdquo like ldquosafe harborrdquo units for gang dropouts transition units for people moving between IMU and general population and a potential unit for people with traumatic brain injur ies As the Mission Housing Administrator said ldquowe are trying to take r estrictive housing beds away so they canrsquo t be filledrdquo 22
DOC has also been working to address IMU staff concerns DOC established a Steering Committee in 2018 including line staff m ental health professionals and correctional managers to help to develop and implement IMU -related policies By including line staff t his Committee directly addresses staff desi res documented in this repor t to be hear d and to have more input in IMU -related policy decisions In addition DOC developed a training handbook especially for IMU staff and now requires staff with IMU posts to complete a training program associated with this handbook within 6 months of beginning work in an IMU In sum DOC has
21 Rachel Friedrich ldquoWashington Corrections Continues Restrictive Housing Reformsrdquo Oct 28 2020 httpswwwdocwagovnews202010282020htm see a lso Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author)
22 See Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author) conversation with Tim Thrasher Feb 19 2021 (notes on file with author)
56
laid a strong groundwork from which to continue to implement many of the recommendations identified in the executive summary to this report
57
APPENDICES
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL
Legend 5 MaxIMU 4 OthIMU 3 Max SOUITP 2 Max Other
1 GP 0 UNK
IMU SOU CBCC OTH FIELD UNK PRISON
4 MAX 5 3 3 2 0 0
CUSTODY 3 CLO 4 1 1 1 1 1
LEVEL 2 MED 4 1 1 1 1 1
1 OTH 4 1 1 1 1 1
0 UNK 4 0 0 0 0 0
G17 Custody Population by Index Location and Custody Level
IMU SOU CBCC OTH PRISN FIELD UNK TOTALS
4 MAX 342 30 22 18 0 0 412
CUSTODY 3 CLO 77 56 400 988 32 0 1553
LEVEL 2 MED 103 74 43 3441 43 0 3704
1 OTH 69 149 16 10811 550 0 11595
0 UNK 12 0 0 470 146 51 679
TOTALS 603 309 481 15728 771 51 17943
58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020
1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020
Local RH Units AHCC
CRCC
TRU
WCCW
WSR-3a
WSR-3
WSP-4
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
0
80
101
64
0
0
40
0
80
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
0
0
40
0
0
0
Local RH Units Total
397 397 325 285 273 172 172 142
IMUs (Ad Seg Beds) CBCC-IMU
MCC-IMU
MICC-IMU
SCCC-IMU
WCC-IMU
WSP-IMU (N)
WSP-IMU (S)
CRCC IMU
124(62)
0
64(0)
0
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
100(100)
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
100(70)
IMUs Total 408 552 552 952 888 888 740 770
Sum Local RH + IMUs
805 949 877 1237 1163 1060 912 912
59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE
See next page
60
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher-Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Journal Justice Quarterly
Manuscript ID RJQY-2020-0181R2
Manuscript Type Original Article
Keywords Restrictive housing Solitary confinement Gangs Prison
The Version of Record of this manuscript has been published and is available in Justice Quarterly published online Dec 21 2020 httpsdoiorg1010800741882520201853800
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
Page 1 of 29 Justice QuarterlyTable 1 Washington DOC Population Characteristics 2002-2017
Cohort 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Age at Snapshot (in Years) 18 to 25 21 19 17 16 13 11 26 to 35 33 33 32 34 35 34 36 to 45 29 29 28 25 26 27 Over 45 17 20 23 25 27 28
Gender Female 7 8 8 8 8 8
Male 93 92 92 93 92 92 RaceEthnicity
White Non-Hispanic 60 63 62 60 61 60 Black Non-Hispanic 21 19 19 19 18 18
Hispanic 12 10 11 12 13 14 OtherUnknown 7 8 9 9 9 9
Most Serious Offense at Conviction Violent Non-Sex 41 42 44 46 46 48
Sex 17 17 20 20 20 19 Property 15 17 18 19 20 19
DrugOther 25 23 18 15 14 13 Missing 2 1 0 0 0 0
Sentence Length (in Months) Mean 879 891 948 998 1017 1009
Standard Deviation 1048 1071 1121 1173 1204 1246 Gang Affiliation by RacialEthnic STG
White 5 5 6 6 5 5 Black 9 9 9 10 10 10
Hispanic 4 5 6 8 9 9 Other 1 1 2 2 2 2
No Gang Affiliation 81 80 78 75 74 74
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17308 17288 17625 17943 Source Authorsrsquo Calculations Washington State Department of Corrections
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
For Peer ReviewOnly
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
350
Justice Quarterly Page 2 of 29
Figure 1 Percentage Change in IMU-Max Population IMU-Max Length of Stay (LOS) and Total Prison Population (Indexed at 2002) Washington DOC 2002-2017
100
150
200
250
300
Perc
enta
ge C
hang
e fr
om 2
002
50
0 2002
(=100) 2005 2008
Snapshot Year 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max Population IMU-Max LOS Total Prison Population
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
48495051525354555657585960
1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647
Page 3 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Table 2 Solitary Confinement in Washington State 2002-2017
2002 Num
Custody amp Confinement Level IMU-Max 149 09
IMU-AdDSeg 105 07 Max-Tx 18 01
Other-Max 34 02 General Population 15499 974
Out of StateUnknown 102 06
2005 Num
228 14 144 09 50 03 55 03
16270 965 105 06
Cohort 2008 2011
Num Num
338 20 472 27 337 19 177 10 44 03 35 02 11 01 27 02
16438 950 16440 951 140 08 137 08
2014 Num
283 16 291 17 42 02 20 01
16893 958 96 05
2017 Num
342 19 260 14 52 03 18 01
17121 954 150 08
Total IMU Total Maximum Custody
254 201
16 13
372 333
22 20
675 393
39 23
649 534
38 31
574 345
33 20
602 412
34 23
Cumulative Days Spent in IMU (Any Custody Status)dagger
Mean (St Dev) 431 (2115) 476 (2303) 562 (2568) 746 (3027) 804 (3271) 824 (3300)
Not placed in IMU 1-45 days
46-90 days 91-365 days
366 days or more (gt1 year) At least 1 day in IMU
12062 2128 499 728 490
3845
758 134 31 46 31 242
12673 2344 487 755 593
4179
752 139 29 45 35 248
12533 2606 583 890 695
4774
724 151 34 51 40 276
12120 2535 610
1041 981
5167
701 147 35 60 57 299
11863 2854 810
1050 1048 5762
673 162 46 60 59 327
11847 2985 928
1075 1108 6096
660 166 52 60 62 340
Days in IMU by Custody and Confinement Level Mean (St Dev)
IMU-Max IMU-AdDSeg
2270 1147
(1362) (1246)
3060 1169
(2392) (1212)
2839 906
(1929) (1169)
3477 1278
(2732) (1385)
3258 664
(3167) (779)
2140 709
(1296) (796)
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17307 17287 17625 17943
Source Authorsrsquo calculations Washington State Department of Corrections Changes in the use of local segregation for disciplinary and administrative purposes (outside of IMUs for prisoners classified lower than Max Custody) likely affect the counts of IMU-AdDSeg populations particularly in early cohort years Total IMU is the sum of all prisoners living in IMU units on July 1st including (i) IMU-Max those on maximum custody housed in IMUs and (ii) IMU-AdDSeg those who are housed in IMUs on lower custody levels including administrative segregation disciplinary segregation and awaiting hearings Total Maximum Custody consists of three groups all classified as maximum custody (i) those housed in IMUs (IMU-Max) (ii) those in SOU or ITP units (Max-Tx) and (iii) those located elsewhere (Other-Max) dagger Days spent in IMU represents cumulative days spent in IMU until the snapshot date for all prisoners regardless of custody classification during their current prison admission
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Justice Quarterly Page 4 of 29Table 3 Comparison of IMU-Max and General Prison Populations Washington DOC 2002-2017
Cohort 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2 IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen 3 Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop4
Background Characteristics 6 Age at Snapshot (Years) 7 18 to 25 36 21 24 19 31 16 24 15 19 13 20 11 8 9
26 to 35 36 to 45
40 17
33 29
40 22
32 29
43 15
32 29
45 18
34 26
41 20
34 26
47 20
34 27
11 Over 45 7 17 13 20 12 23 13 25 19 27 13 29 12 RaceEthnicity13 14
Black Non-Hispanic Hispanic
19 20
21 11
16 22
19 10
15 30
19 10
20 29
19 12
14 37
18 12
17 27
18 13
16 OtherUnknown 13 7 8 8 6 9 7 9 5 9 9 9 17 White Non-Hispanic 48 60 55 63 49 62 44 61 44 62 47 60 18 Most Serious Offense at 19 Conviction
21 22
Violent Non-Sex Sex
68 15
41 17
66 14
42 17
70 9
43 20
74 11
45 21
78 8
45 20
75 7
48 20
23 Property 8 16 10 17 14 19 11 19 10 20 11 20 24 DrugOther 9 25 9 23 7 18 4 16 4 14 7 13
Missing26 Age of First Conviction
1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 (Years)28 29 Under 18
18 to 25
12 69
4 45
9 69
3 45
10 69
3 45
10 65
3 46
8 67
3 46
8 69
3 45
31 Over 25 20 51 22 52 21 52 25 51 25 51 23 52 32 In-Prison Behavioral Profile 33 Gang Affiliation by34 RacialEthnic STG
36 37
White Black
14 22
4 9
21 14
5 9
20 12
5 9
15 14
5 10
15 11
5 10
14 16
4 10
38 Hispanic 21 4 22 4 39 5 33 7 40 8 32 8 39 Other 3 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 4 2 4 2
41 No Gang Affiliation 40 81 43 81 28 79 36 76 31 75 33 76
42 Annual Infraction Rate 43 44 Mean 83 13 51 11 53 11 42 10 47 10 49 11
St Dev 76 24 78 18 54 20 49 17 59 18 67 19 46 Violent Infractions 47 48 Mean 40 05 33 04 33 05 30 05 33 05 30 05
49 St Dev 58 15 45 14 42 15 40 16 43 16 34 16 Staff Assaults
51 52 53
Mean St Dev
12 33
01 04
07 22
00 04
07 20
00 04
07 21
01 05
08 25
01 05
06 20
01 05
54 Total Population 149 15499 228 16270 338 16438 472 16440 283 16893 342 17121
56 Source Authors calculations Washington State Department of Corrections 57 Statistically significant differences between IMU-Max and General Population (Gen Pop) at plt001 (for categorical chi square for 58 numeric t-test) 59
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Page 5 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher -Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Abstract This article presents a rare longitudinal analysis of solitary confinement use in one state prison system spanning 2002-2017 in the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) An ongoing partnership with DOC officials facilitated methodological and conceptual improvements allowing us to construct a dataset that provides a rich description of who is in solitary confinement for how long and why Operationalizing solitary confinement as the intersection of the most serious custody status with the most restrictive housing location we describe significant changes in ethnic composition and behavioral profiles of people in solitary confinement and in frequency and duration of solitary confinement use These results suggest how particular policy interventions have affected the composition numbers and lengths of stay in solitary confinement Combining longitudinal analysis and iterative engagement with DOC officials we provide a roadmap for better understanding solitary confinement use in the United States now and in the future
Tens of thousands of prisoners across the United States experience solitary confinement
annually (ASCA-Liman 2015 2018 Beck 2015) Prisoners generally spend no more than an
hour per day outside of cells the size of a wheelchair-accessible bathroom stall and eat cold
meals alone with limited access to natural light phones family visits or any human touch
Prisoners live not days but months and years under such conditions In tandem with mass
incarceration the use of solitary confinement expanded drastically across the United States in the
1980s and 1990s often in modern hyper-secure ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities (Reiter 2016 Riveland
1999 Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Though integral to incarceration since the prison was ldquobornrdquo and
perpetually controversial (Foucault 1977 Haney amp Lynch 1997 Smith 2006 Rubin amp Reiter
2018) solitary confinement has come under renewed scrutiny in the last decade (Reiter 2018
ASCA-Liman 2015) Federal and state correctional systems have begun to experiment with
mitigation and alternative programs Here we focus on a 15-year period during which the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) attempted to confront these issues and ask
whether and how a prison system might reduce its use of solitary confinement
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Justice Quarterly Page 6 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
The question of whether a prison system might change direction including how the
practice of solitary confinement might be constrained has animated criminological scholarship
over decades (eg Jacobs 1977 Liebling 1999 Petersilia 1991 Rhodes 2004 Reiter 2016
Rubin amp Reiter 2018) A longitudinal quantitative dataset with which to assess these questions
however is rare Our dataset analyzed in collaboration with practitioner partners allows us to
look both at individual faFor Peer Review Only ctors such as how many gang members with violent infraction histories
are placed in solitary confinement for how long in any given year and at institutional factors
including demographic shifts and policy changes which influence behavioral patterns (Toch
1977 Liebling 1999 Toch amp Adams 1989 Haney 2018)
Where scholars have used point-in-time datasets to examine the relationship between
individual and institutional factors in understanding the use and effects of solitary confinement
controversies abound over how to define and operationalize the practice (Kurki amp Morris 2001
Naday et al 2008 Mears et al 2019 Reiter 2016) We identify which prisoners are subjected
to the aversive conditions described above in terms of two factors 1) whether they are living in
units engineered to lock them down (location) and 2) the rules governing how long they stay
their conditions of confinement and movement (custody status) Here these measurement
principles are applied to a rich administrative dataset to ask 1 Who is in solitary confinement
for how long and why 2 How if at all do their individual characteristics including ethnicity
gang status and b ehavioral profiles change over time 3 What patterns emerge from this
analysis We show how the distribution and extent of solitary confinement use in Washington
has shifted with institutional vicissitudes in demographics capacity gang management policies
programming and classification systems
Trajectories of Solitary Confinement Placement
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Page 7 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Estimates of how many people experience solitary confinement annually range from
68000 prisoners to 18 of all prisoners in the United States or over 250000 people (ASCA-
Liman 2015 Beck 2015) To address definitional debates underlying conflicting estimates
Mears et al recently suggested a four-dimensional conceptual framework ndash goal duration
quality and intentionality ndash to describe the constellation of factors that make up solitary
confinement (or ldquorestric
o define solitary confinement a
conceptually and et
For Peer Review Only tive housingrdquo) practices (2019 1434) The operational focus of our
alternative approach allows us to bypass arguments about how t
hically controversial practice Rather our operational definition applies the
near-universal correctional functions of classification and movement to identify the sites and
subjects of solitary confinement from correctional tracking records These methods permit
consistent robust a nalyses of who is subjected to solitary confinement and the association of this
experience with institutional misconduct and other factors
Previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions about whether solitary confinement
has a disparate impact on groups defined by race or ethnicity Studies focusing on patterns in
disciplinary infractions and solitary confinement placements over four to six years tend to find
minimal disparities (Cochran et al 2018 Tasca amp Turanovic 2018) while point-in-time
comparisons of demographics of solitary confinement units with general population units
consistently find non-white prisoners over-represented in solitary confinement (Schlanger 2012
Reiter 2012) A recent study analyzed a survey that asked state prison systems to self-report
solitary confinement and gang-affiliated populations prisoners classified as gang members were
over-represented in solitary confinement across the United States (Pyrooz amp Mitchell 2019)
The study does not m ention race but others have noted the longstanding ties between race and
gangs in US prisons (Berger 2014 Bloom amp Martin 2013 Reiter 2016) strengthening Pyrooz
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 8 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and Mitchellrsquos recommendation to ldquointegrate measures of gang affiliation into correctional
researchrdquo (2019 22) as we do in our analysis
The relationship between solitary confinement and institutional order is also contested (eg
Briggs Sundt and Castellano 2003 Lovell Johnson amp Cain 2007) One recent study among
men in a three-year cohort in a mid-western DOC found that disciplinary segregation was
associated with a greater probability of misconduct (Labrecque amp Smith 2019) but another
study among men in a two-year cohort in the Oregon DOC found that disciplinary segregation
was not a significant predictor of subsequent institutional misconduct (Lucas amp Jones 2017)
Our dataset permits an evaluation of longer-term patterns of misconduct in and out of solitary
settings
One recent study expanded the usual short periods of analysis described in preceding studies
about both race and misconduct using nearly a decade (1987-96) of data from Kansas a prison
system small enough (5-7000 prisoners) to allow tracing of bed-level data to examine individual
correlates of solitary confinement placement such as race and also patterns in frequency and
duration of solitary confinement over time (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Our study takes an even
broader scale approach examining populations in and out of solitary confinement over 15 years
with 15000 or more prisoners per cohort following particular individuals and groups over
decades of criminal and correctional history
Attending to broader institutional forces at play over our study period is critical to our
approach Lynch recently argued that in studies of sentencing findings are often
ldquooperationalized as a single end-stage outcome that is unmoored from the social organizational
and institutional forces that help produce a class of defendants to be sentencedrdquo (2020 1159)
This critique could just as readily be applied to studies of solitary confinement (eg Cochran et
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Page 9 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
al 2018 Logan et al 2017) in which disparities in outcomes and differences in personal and
behavioral characteristics of prisoners are analyzed with limited attention to institutional patterns
such as fluctuations in bed capacity shifts in demographic make-up and reforms or
retrenchments in policies governing solitary confinement placement and release Our
longitudinal dataset allows us to generate individual-level and aggregate statistics on histories
and outcomes during incarceration and to place findings in the context of broader institutional
forces shaping those patterns
The administrative dataset analyzed here was collected as part of a multi-method project also
using ethnographic interview and archival data to evaluate solitary confinement use over time
in Washington (DOC) (Reiter et al 2020) This project extends a decades-long collaborative
relationship between researchers and DOC first between the University of Washington (UW)
and DOC through the Mental Health Collaboration (Allen et al 2001) later in a UW-led multi-
method systematic survey of Washingtonrsquos solitary confinement population in 1999-2000
(Lovell et al 2000 Rhodes 2004 Lovell 2008) and finally in this study replicating and
extending the 2000 study in collaboration with an original member of both previous studies
In rates of overall incarceration and solitary confinement use Washington DOC is below
average it has the 12th lowest rate of incarceration among the states (Kaeble amp Cowhig 2018)
and as of 2018 its reported proportion of population in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo (23) was half the
national average (45) (ASCA-Liman 2018 13)1 In terms of willingness to collaborate with
researchers however Washington DOC is above average current and former DOC leadership
have agreed there are knowledge gaps around solitary confinement invited scholars and
advocates alike to analyze and critique policies in order to address these gaps and participated
actively in collaborations both facilitating access to the administrative data underlying the
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Justice Quarterly Page 10 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
analyses presented here and helping to interpret results In particular Eldon Vail and Dan
Pacholke nationally recognized correctional policy experts led Washington DOC during part of
our study period and consulted with us on interpretation of findings
Research about solitary confinement use has been produced through practitioner-researcher
collaborations in a number of states including Colorado (OrsquoKeefe et al 2011) Florida (Mears
amp Bales 2009) Kansas (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) and Oregon (Pyrooz et al 2020) Few
however have attempted the quantitative and qualitative depth of this project which is more
comparable to the New York studies of Toch and colleagues (eg Toch amp Adams 1989 Toch
1977) conducted as the new ldquosupermaxrdquo era was coming upon us in the 1980s or the California
studies by Petersilia on re-entry and community supervision (eg Petersilia 2009) Ours
represents an intergenerational academic-practitioner collaboration spanning both eras
Data and Methods
This analysis draws on a longitudinal administrative record set of the entire DOC
population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and
2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of admissions and
releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12 million) infractions
(630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) Discussions with DOC research office
partners about how best to meet the data needs of our study exemplifying our academic-
practitioner collaboration led to two major expansions of the scope and power of this dataset
First to assess how solitary confinement populations had changed since the 2000 UW study
we requested archival information on prisoners in any form of solitary confinement on our
snapshot dates Lacking ready capacity to identify these prisoners DOC offered to provide data
for all prisoners in custody on these dates leaving it to us to identify who was in solitary
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Page 11 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
confinement and when Our willingness to pick our own apples from the DOC data tree led to a
30-fold expansion of our subject pool permitting longitudinal comparisons between solitary
confinement and general population prisoners Second DOC provided us all Washington prison
sentences in the entire history of prisoners in our vastly expanded dataset rather than only the
index offense data we had requested Although information about currently active convictions
accompanies prisoners as they move through DOC retrospectively retrieving links between court
and correctional records is complicated by the multiplicity of charges sentencing policies and
admission statuses that may apply Recognizing a systematic problem when we showed them a
pattern of missing data DOC provided the entire prison conviction history for the 57000 prisoners
in our expanded subject population allowing us both to identify the most serious current offense
and to provide a consistent measure of prisonersrsquo criminal histories
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying uniform coding procedures to
compile event-level data into a subject-level dataset We computed the facility location and
custody status of every prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at
each location and subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as
infractions Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and
plausible counts and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all
prisoners in six snapshot cohorts We also use some inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-
tests) in the analyses we present to test for differences across cohorts and groups
Terminology In Washington DOC policy (2020 320250) maximum custody status is the
highest level of custody classification Maximum custody prisoners are assessed in formal
hearings to pose a sufficient risk to safety ndash whether their own or others ndash to warrant holding
them for an extended period in a maximum-security location isolated by architecture procedure
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Justice Quarterly Page 12 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and staffing As legal expert Fred Cohen notes maximum custody is a risk-based classification
justified as a preventive measure rather than a punitive sanction (2008) In Washington DOC
prisoners first enter solitary confinement through short-term administrative segregation (Ad-
Seg) placements usually awaiting adjudication following an infraction Infraction of a specific
prison rule may result in a disciplinary hearing and the sanction of a disciplinary segregation (D-
Seg) placement Alternatively multiple infractions other behavior patterns or an extended stay
in administrative segregation may lead to a re-classification as maximum custody (Max)
In DOC Intensive Management Units (IMUs) are the most secure housing facilities The
term ldquosupermaxrdquo is not a category of institution in DOC instead the state has five IMUs located
at Clallam Bay Corrections Center (CC) Monroe CC Washington CC (ldquoSheltonrdquo) Stafford
Creek CC and the Washington State Penitentiary (called Walla Walla or the ldquoconcrete mamardquo
(Hoffman amp McCoy 2018)) IMUs feature distinct security perimeters with advanced
technology for controlling entrances gates and doors strict procedures for prisoner movement
and no normal occasions for prisoners to share space with others unless shackled Though exact
conditions (like cell size and degree of access to natural light) vary across IMUs the uniformly
restrictive conditions impose intense isolation (often for extended periods of time) comparable to
conditions in other state supermaxes IMUs are adjacent to the ldquomain institutionrdquo (a correctional
center or complex may have multiple facilities or stand-alone buildings sharing a common
Superintendent) to allow escorting prisoners on foot without delay As a Lieutenant at Shelton
said during a prison visit ldquoNothing happens fast around here except going to the IMUrdquo
Transfers between facilities are recorded in DOCrsquos movement records allowing us to
identify who was placed in IMUs and for how long Transfers in and out of cells within a facility
however are recorded as housing changes likely 50 million in number for our subjects vastly
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Page 13 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
exceeding our and DOCrsquos ability to retrieve and compile absent unlimited resources2 Therefore
inter-facility movement records in our data do not capture prisoners isolated on Ad-Seg or D-Seg
status (AdDSeg status) inside a main institution Importantly AdDSeg prisoners who were
living under comparably stringent conditions as IMU-Max prisoners in two decrepit segregation
units within the main institutions at two of Washingtonrsquos oldest prisons ndash Walla Walla and
Monroe ndash are not captured in our data These two units with a combined capacity of 250 closed
in 2011 but were replaced (and then some) by 200 new IMU beds at each prison Our inability
to identify all such AdDSeg prisoners through movement records requires caution in how the
terms ldquoIMUrdquo versus ldquosolitary confinementrdquo are used in our findings Because of this limitation
we center our trend and comparative analyses on the maximum custody group who are reliably
identified over the entire course of our study period and whose long-term presence in maximum
security settings raises the sharpest ethical issues (Lovell 2014)
Results
To contextualize findings on the size and characteristics of Washingtonrsquos solitary
confinement population we first describe overall patterns in the state prison population between
2002 and 2017 Table 1 displays counts and demographic crime type sentence length and gang
affiliation characteristics for the entire prison population incarcerated on each of the six snapshot
dates Washington Statersquos prison population grew by 13 despite changes in sentencing policy
(SHB2338 2002) that were expected to reduce imprisonment by lessening penalties and
providing treatment alternatives for drug-related offenses The proportion of prisoners
incarcerated for drug or other offenses declined substantially while those incarcerated for
violent non-sexual offenses increased by nearly 17 between 2002 and 2017 (plt001)3
Reflecting the shift toward more violent offenses average sentence lengths increased
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Justice Quarterly Page 14 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
significantly as did the average age of prisoners The proportion of Hispanic prisoners increased
by 17 while the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners decreased by 16 (plt001) and
White non-Hispanic representation remained stable4
Affiliation with security threat groups (STG) or prison gangs increased as well in 2017
over one in four prisoners (26) was identified as a member of an STG up from 19 in 2002
The growth of gang affiliation was not equally distributed across racial and ethnic groups5
While rates of gang affiliation for White non-Hispanic prisoners remained relatively low over
the fifteen-year period gang affiliation among prisoners of color increased substantially
between 2002 and 2017 the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners classified as gang-
affiliated rose from 35 to 41 for Hispanic prisoners from 28 to 53 a sharp increase with
substantial consequences for solitary confinement practices
[TABLE 1 NEAR HERE]
Disentangling the Solitary Population Table 2 presents trends in solitary confinement use by
both custody status (classification) and location (facility) We distinguish four groups either
classified at the highest custody level (Maximum labeled ldquoMaxrdquo) or located in the most
restrictive locations (IMUs) At the center of our analysis are prisoners both classified Max and
housed in IMUs (denoted by IMU-Max) Next are prisoners who have not been reclassified
Max but are housed in IMUs for administrative or disciplinary segregation (IMU-AdDSeg)
Third for treatment purposes some Max prisoners are housed at the Special Offender Unit
(SOU) at Monroe designed to address serious behavioral health needs or at the Inmate
Transitional Pod (ITP) at Clallam Bay a program-focused unit for prisoners transitioning out of
solitary confinement (denoted by Max-Tx) Finally a residual group of Max prisoners could not
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Page 15 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
For Peer Review Only
be assigned a facility type because on the snapshot date they were on hospital or court release
or awaiting transfers to an IMU SOU or ITP (Other-Max)6
Solitary confinement use (in IMU-Max IMU-AdDseg and Total IMU) far outpaces
population growth over our study period in the state growing at least 130 (in IMU-Max)
compared to a 13 growth in the state prison population As explained earlier IMU-Max
represents a clearly defined population with reliable snapshot counts for prisoners subjected to
long-term solitary confinement over the entire study period but it excludes prisoners in AdDSeg
either in the IMU or in other within-facility units not identifiable in the between-facility
movement records we analyze Figure 1 illustrates differences in rates and patterns of growth in
IMU-Max and total prison populations accompanied by changes in average length of stay (LOS)
for the IMU-Max group on their snapshot date assignments
[TABLE 2 amp FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE]
One-day counts capture those physically held in IMUs on snapshot dates and demonstrate
that a small but increasing proportion of Washingtonrsquos prison population was held in solitary
confinement across snapshots in both IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg groups One-day counts
however do not account for movement in and out of IMUs at other points To better understand
both the prevalence and duration of placement in solitary we used event-level movement
information to calculate the cumulative amount of time each prisoner spent in solitary
confinement from admission to snapshot date Over the study period a majority of prisoners in
DOC in each snapshot cohort were never placed in solitary confinement but a substantial and
growing proportion of prisoners had spent time in these units The proportion of prisoners
spending at least one day in an IMU between their prison admission and snapshot dates had
increased from 242 in 2002 to 34 in 2017 Prisoners in 2002 spent an average of 6 weeks in
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Justice Quarterly Page 16 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
IMUs from admission to snapshot by 2017 time spent in IMU increased significantly to an
average of 12 weeks (plt001) Changes in mean values are skewed by a few outliers who have
spent their entire (long or life) prison sentences in an IMU beginning decades before and
extending through the study period To counter the skew we binned cumulative days in IMU
into distinct groups 0 days 1-45 days 46-90 days 91 days to 1 year and over 1 year7
Pooling across all cohorts we find that more than half of those who spent at least one day in
an IMU stayed for between 1 and 45 days cumulatively The second largest group (186)
cumulatively spent between three months and one year in solitary confinement and a substantial
proportion (165) of those placed in an IMU spent more than one year there The changing
distribution of cumulative time spent in IMUs reinforces the finding that average time spent in
solitary increased over the study period More prisoners spent at least one day in IMU and
proportions of prisoners in each cumulative length of stay group increased substantially led by
those spending between 46 and 90 days and those spending more than one year in IMU In total
our data demonstrate a greater prevalence of IMU placement across the population over time
and an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs8
In addition to examining cumulative days spent in IMU for the full prison population we
also calculated mean lengths of stay (LOS) in IMUs for both the IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg
groups9 Both groups spent substantial amounts of time in IMU settings although as expected
those in IMU-Max had markedly longer stays in IMU than the IMU-AdDSeg group Across the
study period average time in IMU-Max ranged from 7 to 12 months compared to 2 to 4 months
for the IMU-AdDSeg group The mean LOS for IMU-Max fluctuated generally increasing
until 2011 followed by a decline through 2017 to a level just below the mean LOS in 2002
(Figure 1) For the IMU-AdDSeg group mean LOS dropped even more substantially after
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For Peer Review Only
Page 17 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
2011 Changes in average LOS for both groups were a factor in periods of growth in total IMU
populations prior to 2008 as well as in declines of IMU populations after 2011
The Maximum Custody IMU Population Table 3 compares demographic criminal history gang
status and behavioral histories of IMU-Max and general population (GP) prisoners across
snapshots10 showing significant differences between these groups In both populations White
non-Hispanic prisoners represented the largest group However compared to the GP prisoners
of Hispanic ethnicity were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max while White non-
Hispanic prisoners are under-represented (plt001) Black non-Hispanic people were slightly
under-represented among IMU-Max prisoners relative to their presence in the GP These
disparities diverge over time the proportion of Hispanic prisoners in the IMU-Max population
increased by nearly 34 between 2002 and 2017 while the proportions of all other racial and
ethnic groups decreased
[TABLE 3 ABOUT HERE]
IMU-Max prisoners have more serious conviction and in-prison misconduct histories
than GP prisoners Across cohorts nearly three-quarters (73) of IMU-Max prisoners were
convicted of non-sexual violent offenses compared with just 44 of GP prisoners The IMU-
Max group were also first convicted of prison-eligible offenses at a younger age on average
than those in the GP (plt001) Further in-prison misconduct rates were higher and more serious
for the IMU-Max group annual infraction rates for these prisoners were more than double GP
rates and IMU-Max prisoners committed far more violent infractions and staff assaults than
those in GP (plt001)11 Nevertheless serious misconduct appeared to decline substantially
across IMU-Max prisoner snapshots (but not for GP) with average annual infraction rates among
IMU-Max prisoners falling from 83 in 2002 to 49 in 2017 (plt001) average numbers of violent
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 18 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
infractions decreasing from 4 to 3 (plt05) and average numbers of staff assaults decreasing from
12 to 06 (plt05)
Gang members were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max compared to GP (66
to 22 pooled across all snapshot years) While the prevalence of gang membership grew in
both groups over time patterns of gang affiliation across racial-ethnic sub-categories behaved
differently within the IMU-Max and GP groups Among GP prisoners the proportion of those
affiliated with Hispanic gangs grew by 118 from 2002 to 2017 among IMU-Max prisoners
Hispanic gang membership grew substantially (55) but at a lower rate than in the GP Black
gang membership on the other hand grew by just 7 in the GP but fell by 24 among IMU-
Max prisoners Explaining these patterns is outside the scope of the present analysis but the
scale of divergence in patterns across both racial-ethnic sub-categories of gang affiliates and GP
and IMU-Max populations merits future attention
Discussion
Our findings draw on an especially robust dataset including (1) multiple individual
characteristics like gang status and infraction rates each one of which has constituted the sole
focus of previous analyses (2) snapshot data that covers both the entire prison population and
each individualrsquos entire criminal and incarceration history and (3) a fifteen-year period of
analysis over six snapshot dates a longer time period than in previous studies of solitary
confinement Such a rich dataset makes a succinct analysis of a subset of findings challenging to
present Here we focus on our analytic methods an overview of the characteristics of people in
and out of solitary confinement and overall patterns in solitary confinement use
First we measure the sites subjects and varieties of solitary confinement in terms of the
intersection of location and custody status This operational taxonomy along with the prisoner
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For Peer Review Only
Page 19 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
characteristics associated with solitary confinement placements was achieved by developing an
extensive population analysis script that compiled a correctional dataset tracking events
movements and dispositions into an analytic dataset permitting analysis of patterns of prisoner
behavior and facility placements over time Our multi-generational researcher-practitioner
collaboration with Washington DOC facilitated both obtaining and interpreting this data In turn
we hope our operational taxonomy will facilitate more precise measurements of solitary
confinement use applicable and comparable across the vicissitudes of different correctional
systemsrsquo varied labels for security levels housing locations and solitary confinement practices
(eg Mears et al 2019)
Second we provide an overview and comparison of characteristics of people in solitary
confinement focusing on the specifically targeted IMU-Max group to provide a clear contrast to
general population prisoners Over time the average IMU-Max prisoner was increasingly likely
to be older Hispanic convicted of a violent offense and gang affiliated but decreasingly likely
to have assaulted a staff member Like Pyrooz amp Mitchell (2019) we find gang members over-
represented in solitary confinement relative to their representation in the general prison
population We also find that Hispanic prisoners are increasingly over-represented in solitary
confinement providing evidence of the racially disproportionate impact of solitary confinement
(eg Sakoda amp Simes 2019 Schlanger 2012 Reiter 2012) Our longitudinal analysis shows this
disproportion steadily increasing over time at a faster rate than gang membership in the general
prison system which increased only slightly over our period of analysis As in other studies
finding misconduct associated with solitary confinement placement (eg Labrecque amp Smith
2019) we find that prisoners in solitary confinement have significantly and consistently higher
annual infraction violent infraction and staff assault rates than general population prisoners
15 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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Justice Quarterly Page 20 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
However all three measures of infractions despite remaining fairly stable throughout the
system generally declined in IMU-Max over time
Rendering population patterns visible also renders visible new questions about what
combination of individual behavior patterns and institutional policies produce the changes we
see Have IMU-Max prisoners become less violent and dangerous Have institutional policies
about identifying gang members and behavioral or affiliation criteria for max custody changed
When the UW solitary confinement study was conducted 20 years ago pioneering experiments
in relaxing the stringency of solitary confinement conditions and supporting prisoners in
changing course had begun at Shelton (Rhodes 2004) at that time Washington DOC leaders
justified IMUs as a necessary response to White Supremacist groups and IMU reforms focused
on mitigating organized attacks and challenges to correctional authority by these groups The late
2010s brought another round of reforms attempting to relax the stringent conditions of solitary
confinement this time factional rivalries among gang-affiliated Hispanic prisoners first justified
IMU placements and then became the focus of reform efforts (Warner et al 2014) This
relationship between shifts in prison population demographics behavior patterns and
correctional attention to specific sub-categories of gangs perceived as particularly dangerous
deserves further analysis but identifying the relevant trends as we do here is a first step
Third we see changing patterns in solitary confinement use over time Overall the
prevalence and duration of solitary confinement grew across Washingtonrsquos prison population
between 2002 and 2017 The raw numbers and rates of both Max custody status prisoners and
prisoners in IMU locations more than doubled from 2002 to 2017 And an increasing proportion
of people throughout the system experienced solitary confinement in 2017 more than 1 in 3
prisoners had spent at least a day in solitary compared to 1 in 4 in 2002 This trend echoes and
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 16
For Peer Review Only
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Page 21 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
quantifies Sakoda amp Simesrsquo argument that solitary confinement is a ldquonormal event during
imprisonmentrdquo (2019 2) Although rates of solitary confinement use increased overall average
lengths of stay in solitary confinement (which peaked in 2011 in tandem with the peak years of
solitary confinement use in Washington) decreased By 2017 average lengths of stay on IMU-
Max and IMU-AdDSeg (along with the standard deviations) were the shortest they had been in
the state since 2002 This analysis reveals that Washington DOC had some success in reducing
its use of solitary confinement from peak levels and especially in shortening lengths of stay in
these conditions But what forces facilitated or constrained these reductions
The dramatic shifts we document in both numbers of people in solitary confinement and
durations of stays ndash without any associated dramatic shifts in the usually assumed behavioral
predictors of solitary confinement like overall institutional rates of gang membership or violent
infractions ndash suggest the influence of other institutional factors (cf Lynch 2020) While
additional analysis is needed we can thanks to our iterative conversations with DOC officials
suggest two institutional factors that influenced rates and durations of solitary confinement use
during periods of abrupt change bed capacity increases and local-level rehabilitative
programming changes
First between 2000 and 2008 while DOCrsquos expanding capacity was continually
outpaced by population growth (despite legislative changes intended to reduce imprisonment
WSIPP 2006) IMU capacity in Washington expanded by 520 beds Three years later in 2011
both IMU-Max counts and average LOS peaked Both then decreased in tandem with decreasing
IMU capacity down 212 beds as of 2017 as some units were re-purposed for other special
groups such as parole violators and managed with far less restrictive protocols While the
relationship between capacity IMU counts and length of stay deserves its own focused analysis
17 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 22 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
we have taken the first step by identifying relevant trends These findings suggest that
constraining capacity is likely a key to long-term reductions in solitary confinement along with
reducing lengths of stay and rate of assignments into maximum security settings like IMUs
Second between 2011 and 2014 Washington DOC built upon previous local initiatives
at Clallam Bay and Walla Walla IMUs embarking on an effort to ldquoreinvent what segregation can
berdquo partnering with Vera Institute of Justice eliminating some aversive disciplinary policies
and introducing facility-specific missions and group rehabilitative programming across IMUs
(Neyfakh 2015) Both the temporary drop in IMU-Max populations in 2014 and the more
sustained decreases in average lengths of stay for this population between 2011 and 2017 are tied
to these interventions
The correctional population analysis presented in this study exemplifies an approach to
research and collaboration suited to improving the ability of corrections systems to track changes
in prisoner characteristics lengths of stay and overall rates of placement in various forms of
solitary confinement Rendering such patterns visible strengthens researcher-practitioner
collaboration revealing in Washingtonrsquos case what is working ie sustained reductions in
lengths of solitary confinement stays and what is not working ie less sustained reductions in
rates of solitary confinement use By displaying institutional patterns our collaborative research
findings also suggest avenues of analysis to improve outcomes for prisoners and in prison
settings
MAIN TEXT WORD COUNT 6082
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 18
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 23 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
References
Allen DG Lovell DG amp Rhodes LA Correctional mental health a research agenda In JJ
Fitzpatrick PA White eds Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Research Digest New York
Springer pp 180-184
Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
Yale Law School (ASCA-Liman) (2015) Time-In-Cell The ASCA-Liman 2014 National
Survey of Administrative Segregation in Prison (Aug) Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca-
liman_administrativesegregationreportpdf
__ (2018) Reforming restrictive housing The 2018 ASCA-Liman nationwide survey of time-in-
cell Report issued by the Association of State Correctional Administrators (ASCA) amp the
Liman Center for Public Interest Law at Yale Law School Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca_liman_2018_restrictiv
e_housing_released_oct_2018pdf
Beck A J (2015) Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 201112 Washington DC
Bureau of Justice Statistics Government Printing Office Retrieved from
httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112pdf
Berger D (2014) Captive Nation Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina Press
Bloom J and WE Martin (2013) Black Against Empire The History and Politics of the Black
Panther Party Berkeley University of California Press
Briggs CS JL Sundt and TC Castellano (2003) ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security
prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 1341-1376
19 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 24 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Cochran JC E L Toman D P Mears amp W D Bales (2018) Solitary Confinement as
Punishment Examining In-Prison Sanctioning Disparities Justice Quarterly 35(3) 381-411
Cohen Fred 2008 Penal isolation beyond the seriously mentally ill Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 1017-1047
Foucault M (1977) Discipline and Punish The Birth of the Prison New York Pantheon Books
Haney Craig ldquoThe Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement A Systematic Critiquerdquo
Crime and Justice 47 no 1 (2018) pp 365-416
Haney C amp Lynch M 1997 Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of
supermax and solitary confinement NYU Review of Law amp Social Change 23 477ndash570
Hoffman E amp McCoy J 2018 Concrete Mama Prison Profiles from Walla Walla Seattle WA
University of Washington Press
Kaeble D Cowhig M (2018) Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121
US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018
Kurki L amp N Morris (2001) The Purposes Practices and Problems of Supermax Prisons Crime
and Justice 28 358-424
Labrecque R M amp Smith P (2019) Assessing the impact of time spent in restrictive housing
confinement on subsequent measures of institutional adjustment among men in prison Criminal
Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1445-1455
Liebling A (1999) ldquoDoing Research in Prison Breaking the Silencerdquo Theoretical Criminology
Vol 3147ndash73
Logan MW B Dulisse S Peterson MA Morgan TM Olma P Pareacute (2017) Correctional
shorthands Focal concerns and the decision to administer solitary confinement Journal of
Criminal Justice 52 90-100
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 20
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For Peer Review Only
Page 25 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Lucas J W amp Jones M A (2019) An analysis of the deterrent effects of disciplinary segregation
on institutional rule violation rates Criminal Justice Policy Review 30(5) 765-787
Lovell DG 2008 Patterns of disturbance in a supermax population Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 985-1004
Lovell DG (2014) Isolation Vignettes Practical applications of strict scrutiny The Correctional
Law Reporter 26(1) 3
Lovell DG Cloyes KC Allen DG amp Rhodes LA 2000 Who lives in super-maximum
custody A Washington State study Federal Probation 64(2) 33-38
Lovell DG C Johnson KC Cain 2007 Recidivism of Supermax Prisoners in Washington
State Crime and Delinquency 53(4) 633-56
Lynch M (2019) Focally Concerned About Focal Concerns A Conceptual and Methodological
Critique of Sentencing Disparities Research Justice Quarterly 36(7) 1148-1175
Mears D P Hughes V Pesta G B Bales W D Brown J M Cochran J C amp Wooldredge
J (2019) The new solitary confinement A conceptual framework for guiding and assessing
research and policy on ldquoRestrictive housingrdquo Criminal Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1427-
1444
Mears DP amp WD Bales (2009) Supermax Incarceration and Recidivism Criminology 47(4)
1131-66
National Institute of Justice (NIJ) (2016) Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and
Future Directions Washington DC National Institute of Justice
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nij250315pdf
21 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 26 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Neyfakh L 2015 What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate 432015
httpsslatecomnews-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-
surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml
OrsquoKeefe Maureen L Kelli J Klebe Alysha Stucker Kristin Sturm amp William Leggett (2011) One
Year Longitudinal Study of the Psychological Effects of Administrative Segregation Document
No 232973 Washington DC National Criminal Justice Research Service National Institute
of Justice wwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants 232973pdf
Petersilia J (1991) Policy Relevance and the Future of Criminology Criminology 29(1) 1-15
__ (2009) When Prisoners Come Home Parole and Prisoner Re-entry New York Oxford
University Press
Pyrooz D C amp M M Mitchell (2019) The Use of Restrictive Housing on Gang and Non- Gang
Affiliated Inmates in US Prisons Findings from a National Survey of Correctional Agencies
Justice Quarterly 37(4) 590-615
Pyrooz DC RM Labrecque JJ Tostlebe amp B Useem (2020) Views on COVID-19 from Inside
Prison Perspectives of High-security Prisoners Justice Evaluation Journal doi
1010802475197920201777578
Reiter K (2012) Parole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007
Punishment amp Society 14(5) 530-63
__ (2016) 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven
Yale University Press)
__ (2018) ldquoAfter Solitary Confinementrdquo Studies in Law Politics and Society Vol 77 1-29
Reiter K J Ventura D Lovell D Augustine M Barragan T Blair K Chesnut P Dashtgard
G Gonzalez N Pifer J Strong (2020) ldquoPsychological Distress in Solitary Confinement
Symptoms Severity and Prevalence United States 2017-18rdquo American Journal of Public
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 22
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 27 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Health Vol 110 S52-S56
Rhodes LA (2004) Total Confinement Madness and Reason in Maximum Security Berkeley
CA University of California Press
Riveland C (1999) Supermax prisons Overview and general considerations Washington DC
National Institute of Corrections httpstaticnicicgovLibrary014937pdf
Rubin A T amp Reiter K (2018) Continuity in the Face of Penal Innovation Revisiting the
History of American Solitary Confinement Law amp Social Inquiry Vol 434 1604-1632
Sakoda RT amp Simes JT (2019) Solitary Confinement and the US Prison Boom Criminal
Justice Policy Review doi 1011770887403419895315
Schlanger M (2012) Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial
disparities Michigan Journal of Race amp Law 18 241
Smith Peter S 2006 The Effects of Solitary Confinement on Prison Inmates A Brief History and
Review of the Literature In Michael Tonry (ed) Crime and Justice 34 441-528
State of Washington SHB1765 1993
Tasca Melinda amp J Turanovic (2018) Examining Race and Gender Disparities in Restrictive
Housing Placements National Institute of Justice WEB Du Bois Program of Research on
Race and Crime Project SummaryDoc No 252062
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants252062pdf
Toch Hans (1977) Living in Prison The Ecology of Survival New York Free Press
Toch H amp Adams K w Grant D (1989) Coping Maladaptation in prisons Washington DC
Transaction Publishers revised as Acting Out American Psychological Association 2002
23 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 28 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Warner B D Pacholke amp C Kujath (2014) Operation Place Safety First Year in Review
(Washington State Department of Corrections)
httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
WSIPP (Washington State Institute for Public Policy) (2006) Evidence-Based Public Policy
Options to Reduce Future Prison Construction Criminal Justice Costs and Crime Rates
httpswwwwsippwagovReportFile952Wsipp_Evidence-Based-Public-Policy-Options-to-
Reduce-Future-Prison-Construction-Criminal-Justice-Costs-and-Crime-Rates_Full-
Reportpdf
Acknowledgements The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Eldon Vail Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Formerly of the University of Washington Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor and L Clark Johnson provided critical advice at early stages of data compilation At the University of California Irvine Keely Blissmer helped to compile the literature review Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Pasha Dashtgard Gabriela Gonzalez and Justin Strong all participated in data collection and analysis at various stages of this project Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
Funding Details This work was supported by the Langeloth Foundation and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
Disclosure Statement None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
1 In a timely example of how relevant the analysis in the instant study is DOC research staff recently noted that they ldquohad some concernsrdquo with these numbers as originally reported and have revised them upwards re-calculating that in 2015 34 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo according to the ASCA-Liman Definition and in 2017 41 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo by this definition E-mail communication with DOC Department of Research dated Sept 25 and Sept 28 2020 on file with authors The ASCA-Liman report defines ldquorestrictive housingrdquo as ldquoseparating prisoners from the general population and holding them in cells for an average of 22 or more hours per day for 15 continuous days or morerdquo 2 Intra-facility housing changes and periods spent in recently decommissioned internal solitary confinement units are better captured in our related intensive field study dataset of 106 solitary confinement prisoners (Reiter et al 2020) 3 General crime types were derived from DOC codes in the administrative data Violent non-sex offenses include murder manslaughter robbery and assault sex offenses include rape sexual assault child molestation and failure to register as a sex offender property crimes include arson burglary theft forgery trafficking and possession of
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 24
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For Peer Review Only
Page 29 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
stolen property drug crimes include manufacturing delivering or possession with intent to distribute and possession of a controlled substance 4 To avoid confusion we follow DOCs terminology with the term Hispanic which DOC codes separately from race as lsquoHispanic Originrsquo (YN) but we apply these data to define mutually exclusive categories ldquoWhite non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as White and who is not classified as Hispanic Origin ldquoBlack non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as Black and not identified as Hispanic ldquoHispanicrdquo includes any individual whose ethnicity is listed as Hispanic or Latino regardless of any other racial identification ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as AsianPacific Islander Native AmericanAmerican Indian Other Unknown and whose ethnicity is not Hispanic 5 Rates of gang affiliation by racialethnic group were generated by dividing the total number of members in each racialethnic group identified as an STG member by the total number of prisoners of each racialethnic group Table 1 displays the STG membership by racialethnic affiliation of STGs grouped from detailed STG data provided by DOC STGs identified as ldquoWhiterdquo affiliated included Biker Skinhead White Supremacist and Security Threat Concern ldquoBlackrdquo affiliated included Black Gangster Disciples Blood Crip and Vice Lord ldquoHispanicrdquo affiliated included Nortentildeo Surentildeo Paisas La Fuma Cuban and Hispanic-Other ldquoOtherrdquo affiliated included Asian and Other 6 Our original analysis identified an even larger proportion of prisoners in this ldquoOther-Maxrdquo group our practitioner collaborators thought more than 10 was an unlikely proportion of prisoners to be assigned max custody status but still awaiting placement in an IMU or similar facility and encouraged us to evaluate whether some of those ldquoOther-Maxrdquo prisoners were housed out-of-state Indeed when we examined individual cases in the original movement files we found this was true leading us to better specify and exclude those prisoners in our sample of any custody status who were housed out of state 7 Here the 45-day cut point reflects institutionally-mandated administrative hearings required to extend or release an individual from administrative segregation Likewise for those classified as Max (re-)classification reviews only happen every 6-12 months as reflected in the overall longer mean lengths of stay for IMU-Max as opposed to IMU-AdDSeg groups Both represent examples of policies driving patterns in lengths of stay 8 This analysis uses the person (in custody as of the snapshot date) as the unit of analysis Even if a single person has multiple stays in an IMU during the current admission up to the snapshot date they would be counted only once as ldquohaving spent at least one day in an IMUrdquo We further examined the average percentage of days spent in an IMU out of the total number of days in prison up to the snapshot date for each cohort finding an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs across the cohorts While not presented here in detail this finding reinforces the trends in the cumulative time spent in IMU and average LOS analyses 9 Unlike the cumulative days in IMU calculations the average length of stay by classification and confinement levels presented here do not cumulate days in IMU facilities Here each placement in a distinct IMU facility is analyzed as a separate placement term Thus if one prisoner is placed in IMU facility A and subsequently moved to IMU facility B the length of stay in each placement will be counted separately (To the extent individuals have consecutive stays across multiple IMUs then these numbers might undercount average lengths of total stay) Length of stay is calculated from admission date in the current incarceration up until the snapshot date 10 The general population (GP) excludes prisoners housed in IMUs prisoners with a max custody classification held in other locations (ie those in SOU ITP or ldquoOther Locationsrdquo) prisoners held out of state and prisoners whose locations or custody statuses were unknown 11 Violent infractions include seven infraction types aggravated assault on another offender fighting possession of a weapon aggravated assault on a staff member sexual assault of a staff member assault on another offender sexual assault of another offender and assault on a staff member
25 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE
See next page
91
ID
ID
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
PLOS ONE
OPEN ACCESS
Citation Strong JD Reiter K Gonzalez G Tublitz R Augustine D Barragan M et al (2020) The body in isolation The physical health impacts of incarceration in solitary confinement PLoS ONE 15 (10) e0238510 httpsdoiorg101371journal pone0238510
Editor Andrea Knittel University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill UNITED STATES
Received February 19 2020
Accepted August 18 2020
Published October 9 2020
Peer Review History PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process therefore we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final published articles The editorial history of this article is available here httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510
Copyright copy 2020 Strong et al This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original author and source are credited
Data Availability Statement Data cannot be shared publicly because the administrative data we analyze in this paper is drawn from a confidential data file shared with the research team for the
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The body in isolation The physical health
impacts of incarceration in solitary
confinement
Justin D Strong 1 Keramet Reiter1 Gabriela Gonzalez1Dagger Rebecca Tublitz1Dagger
Dallas Augustine1Dagger Melissa Barragan1Dagger Kelsie Chesnut 1Dagger Pasha Dashtgard2Dagger
Natalie Pifer3Dagger Thomas R Blair4Dagger
1 Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Irvine California United
States of America 2 Department of Psychological Sciences University of California Irvine Irvine California
United States of America 3 Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice The University of Rhode Island
Kingston Rhode Island United States of America 4 Department of Psychiatry Southern California
Permanente Medical Group Downey Los Angeles California United States of America
These authors contributed equally to this work
Dagger These authors also contributed equally to this work GG and RT are joint assistant authors on this work
jdstronguciedu
Abstract
We examine how solitary confinement correlates with self-reported adverse physical health
outcomes and how such outcomes extend the understanding of the health disparities associ-
ated with incarceration Using a mixed methods approach we find that solitary confinement is
associated not just with mental but also with physical health problems Given the dispropor-
tionate use of solitary among incarcerated people of color these symptoms are most likely to
affect those populations Drawing from a random sample of prisoners (n = 106) in long-term
solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections in 2017 we con-
ducted semi-structured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assess-
ments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for these subjects We also
conducted a paper survey of the entire long-term solitary confinement population (n = 225
respondents) and analyzed administrative data for the entire population of prisoners in the
state in 2017 (n = 17943) Results reflect qualitative content and descriptive statistical analy-
sis BPRS scores reflect clinically significant somatic concerns in 15 of sample Objective
specification of medical conditions is generally elusive but that itself is a highly informative
finding Using subjective reports we specify and analyze a range of physical symptoms expe-
rienced in solitary confinement (1) skin irritations and weight fluctuation associated with the
restrictive conditions of solitary confinement (2) un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
associated with the restrictive policies of solitary confinement (3) musculoskeletal pain exac-
erbated by both restrictive conditions and policies Administrative data analyses reveal dispro-
portionate rates of racialethnic minorities in solitary confinement This analysis raises the
stakes for future studies to evaluate comparative prevalence of objective medical diagnoses
and potential causal mechanisms for the physical symptoms specified here and for under-
standing differential use of solitary confinement and its medically harmful sequelae
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 1 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
limited purpose of evaluating patterns of solitary confinement use in the Washington department of corrections If any researchers wish to obtain a similar data file from the Washington department of corrections the authors of this paper would be happy to consult with those researchers about the request and the process for obtaining the data In theory the administrative data file used in this study could be accessed again by future researchers Researchers would need to contact the Washington department of corrections Here is the process and relevant contacts httpswww DocWaGovinformationdataresearch Htmrequests We confirm the authors have no special access privileges others would not have to the data underlying our study beyond patient negotiations with the Washington department of corrections about exactly what data would be shared for what purposes
Funding KR received a Langeloth Grant from the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation https wwwlangelothorg The funders had no role in study design data collection and analysis decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist
Introduction
The health implications of solitary confinement have received increasing attention in recent
years [1 2] Although both the conditions and terms defining solitary confinement are con-
tested the practice generally involves being locked in a cell alone for 22 or more hours per
day with extremely limited access to human contact and communication [3 4] Until recently
however research on the health consequences of solitary confinement has focused almost
entirely on the negative impacts on mental health [4ndash8] While initial studies focused on the
effects of sensory deprivation [9ndash11] recent work has examined the impacts of social depriva-
tions [12 13] Such studies have found that placement in solitary confinement has been associ-
ated with symptoms of increased psychological distress such as anxiety depression paranoia
and aggression [14ndash16] A 2018 study for instance found that prisoners who had spent time
in solitary confinement were three times as likely to exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) than those who had not [17] Some researchers however have argued that
the psychological harms of solitary confinement are limited or unverified [18 19] The analy-
ses on which such opinions rely have in turn been criticized for neglecting existing literature
and for other serious methodological concerns including an inability to isolate exposure to
solitary confinement lack of specificity about variability and comparability in actual condi-
tions of confinement and the inapplicability of psychological assessment scales in the prison
context [1 20]
In a study examining the lived experiences of solitary confinement in Washington state we
too focused on documenting the mental health impacts of the practice through qualitative
interviews with a random sample of 106 prisoners in long-term solitary confinement applica-
tion of a Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment at two points in time with those pris-
oners review of medical health records and analysis of administrative data To our surprise
however we found that after anxiety and depression the third most common significant
health symptoms experienced by our subjects were ldquosomatic concernsrdquo defined by the BPRS
as ldquoconcerns over present bodily healthrdquo [21] This observation led us to examine our data sys-
tematically for evidence of the impacts of solitary confinement on physical health and to con-
sider the implications of such impacts for understanding the health disparities enacted by
solitary confinement and by incarceration more broadly
Existing research on the physical health impacts of incarceration demonstrates the need for
further study of both the medical effects of isolation and its racially disparate impacts espe-
cially considering that there are roughly 80000 people in isolation units nationwide and this
population includes a disproportionate number of racial minorities relative to the overall
prison population [22] Outside of prison health disparities by race and ethnicity are well
attested by existing epidemiologic research [23] Notably Black and other racialethnic minor-
ities consistently show lower life expectancies and worse mental health outcomes than whites
[24ndash27] Health disparities persist and are magnified among the incarcerated population
where people of color are disproportionately represented [28ndash30] In particular people in
prison are at higher risk than the general population for substance use disorders psychiatric
disorders victimization and chronic infectious diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C [31ndash34]
Incarceration has also been shown to exacerbate chronic illnesses such as obesity [35] hyper-
tension and asthma [36 37 29] and formerly incarcerated people experience disparately
adverse health outcomes more generally [38] The interaction between the disparate impacts
of race and incarceration on health mean that mass incarceration itself has been identified as a
social determinant of health for Black men in the United States [39 40]
Solitary confinement amplifies the disproportionately adverse effects of mass incarceration
on people of color Depending on the composition of the prison system Blacks andor Latinos
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 2 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
are often over-represented in solitary confinement relative to their (over)representation in the
general prison population [40ndash44] Any concentrated health disadvantages affecting people in
prison and especially people of color is potentially even more concentrated among those liv-
ing in solitary confinement Moreover existing evidence suggests that conditions of solitary
confinement exacerbate health problems and pose a significant public health risk [45 42]
Studies reporting the physical health impacts of solitary confinement have tended to focus
on issues like self-harm and suicide [46 47 8] One recent study has examined the cardiovas-
cular health burdens of solitary confinement [45] A growing body of neuroscience literature
has examined the effects of solitary confinement on the brains of lab animals documenting
that lab animals in isolated environments have ldquoa decrease in the anatomical complexity of the
brainrdquo compared to those in more enriched environments [48 49] (p70) One recent study
found similar effects in Antarctic expeditioners a shrinking hippocampus hypothesized to be
a result of the isolated and monotonous environment [50] Such neuroscience research has
been used in litigation to argue that there is likely a similar effect on humans imprisoned in
solitary confinement [51 48 49] The associations between solitary confinement self-harm
and lab animalsrsquo brain structure suggest comorbidity between mental health and physical
injury in solitary confinement [1 48]
The physical effects of solitary confinement manifest well beyond release from isolation
and from incarceration overall One recent study has examined post-release mortality (from
all causes including suicide murder and drug overdose) associated with previous time in soli-
tary confinement people who had spent time in solitary confinement in North Carolina
between 2000 and 2015 were 24 more likely to die in their first year after release than former
prisoners who had not spent time in solitary confinement [52] Similarly a 2020 study found
that Danish people who had spent time in solitary confinement had higher mortality within
five years of being released from prison compared to those who never spent time in solitary
confinement [53] This mortality risk associated with solitary confinement exceeds the already
high mortality risk associated with incarceration and release from prison [52ndash54]
In sum while many studies have examined the relationship between incarceration and
health and some studies have examined the relationship between solitary confinement and
mental health the existing literature lacks analysis of disparate physical health outcomes across
levels and severity of confinement [2] especially within isolation and for incarcerated people
of color To our knowledge this article is the first of its kind to consider associations between
solitary confinement and a range of physical health problems and to incorporate explicit con-
sideration of racial health disparities
Methods and materials
To explore the physical health problems experienced in isolation we draw upon a research
study of people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of
Corrections (WADOC) The study consists of four dimensions of participant data 1 surveys
of prisoners in solitary confinement 2 in-depth interviews with a random sample of prisoners
in solitary confinement 3 reviews of the medical (covering mental and physical health) files
as well as the disciplinary records for this subset of prisoners and 4 administrative data for
the entire 2017 prison population provided by the WADOC Data was collected in 2017 and
2018
Setting
WADOC is a mid-sized state prison system with the 12th lowest rate of incarceration of the 50
United States [20] The state and its prison system have a reputation for being progressive
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 3 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
including engaging in reforms to minimize the use of solitary confinement statewide and for
inviting independent academic researchers to evaluate conditions and programs [20 55ndash57]
Five of the statersquos 12 prison facilities have an Intensive Management Unit (IMU) an all-male
unit or building housing people in solitary confinement (with highly restricted access to com-
missary phones radios televisions visitors and roughly 10 hours per week out-of-cell) for
durations ranging from months to years Our study focused on people within the IMUs on
ldquomaximum custody statusrdquo the highest security level assigned to state prisoners housed in the
IMU for an indeterminate period usually following one or more rule violations with return to
the general prison population contingent on meeting specific benchmarks
Participant sampling
First paper surveys were distributed in-person (and collected on the same day) to all 363 peo-
ple on maximum custody status in the five state IMUs in the spring of 2017 Next during the
summer of 2017 roughly one-third (29) of all 363 people on maximum custody status in
IMUs were interviewed selected from randomly ordered lists of the population of each IMU
One year later (2018) all participants from our initial random sample who were still incarcer-
ated one year later including those no longer housed in the IMU were re-interviewed We
also reviewed paper medical and disciplinary files for each consenting year-one interview par-
ticipant Interviews file reviews and observations were conducted over two separate three-
week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team members
Finally we received administrative data on all people within the state prison system as of July
1 2017
Research team training
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and develop the interview instru-
ment Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol for
administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment train-
ing sessions with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Venturamdashin year one and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Dr Ventura conducted an interra-
ter reliability analysis confirming trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or
greater for the BPRS This extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members (9
women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral students (9) with
expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement settings identified
and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being studied and mini-
mized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application of questions
and assessments Eight of the authors on this paper participated in interviews two participated
only in data analysis
Interviews
On site in the Washington State IMUs after the random sample was drawn and willing partici-
pants identified prison staff escorted participants one at a time to a confidential area (moni-
tored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff) Prior to conducting interviews interviewers
informed participants that participation was voluntary and would not involve incentives
administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all informa-
tion shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent security-
related threatrdquo (In the highly restrictive setting of the IMU any incentive beyond providing
human contact and an attentive listener would both run the risk of being an undue influence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 4 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
coercing participation and be administratively prohibited) Participants provided oral consent
to participate in the interview Immediately following interviews interviewers asked partici-
pants whether they consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to partici-
pating in one-year follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all
but two (n = 104) consented in writing to medical file reviews Following interviews interview-
ers reviewed consenting participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of diagnoses prescrip-
tions and substance abuse status WADOC additionally provided electronic administrative
health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as comparable popula-
tion-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
All identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings tran-
scripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible
only through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in
data cleaning and linking The University of California Irvine Office of Research Institutional
Review Board approved this study (HS 2016ndash2816) and the WADOC Research Department
reviewed this approval
Data collection instruments
The initial paper survey of people confined in the WADOC IMU consisted of 36 numbered
questions (each containing a combination of yesno ordinal bubble options and short answer
sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to explain or elaborate on their answers)
about experiences in IMUs conditions of confinement health and well-being and demo-
graphic background drawing from existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [58ndash
62] Survey in S1 Text In all there were 89 substantive items on the survey (excluding demo-
graphic questions) coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU) ordinal (eg
daily weekly monthly describing frequency of interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) vari-
ables In this paper we report on the results of a sub-set of five quantitatively coded items relat-
ing to health from this larger survey This survey functioned as a pilot instrument for the in-
person interviews allowing us to ensure questions were clear and relevant yielding responses
comparable across subjects and institutional contexts and providing our interviewers with a
baseline description of participantsrsquo experiences prior to conducting qualitative interviews
The qualitative interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured questions
(each containing a combination of yesno questions and probing open-ended follow-up ques-
tions) seeking elaboration on responses from the survey questions and also drawing from
existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [60ndash63] including conditions of daily life
(prior to and during isolation) perceived state of physical and mental health access to medical
treatment and experiences with required programming in the IMU among other topics
Interview instrument in S2 Text We first used the instrument at the smallest IMU in Wash-
ington interviewing 15 prisoners and we then revised both the wording and ordering of ques-
tions for maximum clarity and engagement in the remaining 91 interviews we conducted
across the four other IMUs in the state In total 40 of the substantive items on the interview
instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 18 embedded questions designed to
establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg
How much does it cost to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have you noticed any
changes in your health since you have been in this IMU) variables Such questions always
included open-ended follow-up questions (eg Can you describe those changes) Transcribed
responses to those open-ended follow-up questions which related in any way to physical
health constitute the central source of data analyzed in this paper
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 5 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Interviews ranged in length from 45 minutes to three hours Follow-up interviews lasted
between 45 minutes and two hours The condensed year-two instrument contained approxi-
mately 70 questions largely replicating the year-one questions but excluding the background
demographic questions and questions about experiences over time in prison and adjusting
some questions to address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status
As part of both initial and follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psy-
chological assessment both during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following
(for the 10 observational items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech)
the interviews For self-report questions (14 items) embedded in the interview guide inter-
viewers asked about the presence of symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard [20]
Interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier audio recorded (with permis-
sion) professionally transcribed in Microsoft Word translated (in one case from Spanish into
English) by research team members systematically stripped of identifying information and
then systematically checked against the original audio by the original interviewer(s) Interviews
were linked by random identifier to BPRS score sheets (which were scanned and entered into
Microsoft Excel for descriptive statistical analysis) scanned medical file review notes and
WADOC administrative data
Data analysis amp reporting
BPRS and other administrative data were imported into Statistical Package for Social Science
(SPSS) (IBM Armonk NY) and Stata (StataCorp LLC College Station TX) to generate
descriptive statistics including the comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS
items and factors relating to physical health and demographics of the sample interview popula-
tion as compared to the IMU population the overall state prison population and the overall
population of the state itself Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos test were performed to evaluate
the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing location time and raceethnicity chi
square tests of homogeneity were performed to compare racialethnic distributions in the
IMU population the general prison population and the Washington state population The
demographic data utilizes a confidential data file from the WADOC
Transcribed interviews were analyzed using Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software Develop-
ment GmbH Berlin Germany) Six team members who had also conducted interviews
engaged in an iterative and recursive coding process Consistent with the tenets of constructivist
grounded theory coders inductively explored how participants make meaning of their experi-
ences (here their time in solitary confinement) [63 64] This process included initial line-by-
line open-coding of a subset of transcripts which generated a list of 214 codes grouped into 11
major categories (eg Health) with sub-themes (eg physical health) [63] Some of these initial
codes and categories corresponded with specific questions on our interview instrument (most
relevant for the instant analysis question 29 concerned medical ldquokitesrdquo and questions 30 31
and 38 concerned physical health and somatic concerns) However open-ended questions also
yielded responses related to these topics and were so coded Given the constraints of the prison
setting (in-person contact is expensive and time-consuming mail contact is not confidential
because of prison censoring policies) participants have not provided systematic feedback on
their transcripts or our findings However the year-two interviews did give research team mem-
bers an opportunity to discuss year-one themes with participants
All quotations presented in this paper were initially identified in the first phase of our cod-
ing process by one of three (out of our initial 214) codes ldquosomatic concernsrdquo ldquophysical healthrdquo
or ldquokitesrdquo (the standard slang term for a paper form handed to a correctional officer to request
medical attention) Two coders then used intermediate focused coding techniques to
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 6 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
re-code these 319 quotes exploring the relationship between solitary confinement condi-
tions and policies and physical health problems ldquotransform[ing] basic data into more abstract
concepts and allowing the theory to emerge from the datardquo [64 p 5]
Notes from reviewing participantsrsquo paper medical files corroborate details from the qualita-
tive analysis that systematically anchors this data Each participant has been assigned a pseudo-
nym and because we are also exploring the racially disparate impact of the health problems we
identify we specify each quoted participantrsquos self-identified race or ethnicity We linked quota-
tions to specific racialethnic identities only after quotations were selected for inclusion in this
manuscript as representative of the themes we identified in coding
Results
In total 225 prisoners in IMU (62) responded to our in-person survey The refusal rate of
initial interviews was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of prison-
ers [15 58 59 65] The drop-out rate of our sample for the one-year follow-up interviews was
comparable to other studies at 25 there were 4 refusals 21 institutional out-of-state and
parole transfers precluding follow-up and one death [58ndash61] Our random sample of 106 (all-
male) IMU prisoners reflects a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU mean of 5
prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Among our participants 42 were white 12
were African American 23 were Latino 23 were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differ-
ences between our participants and all people held in IMU at the time of our sample People in
the general prison population at the time of our sample are notably different as they are older
less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang-affili-
ated and less likely to be Latino than those held in IMU [20] (We discuss racial differences
across these populations further in the final results sub-section)
Prevalence of somatic concerns
As an initial basis for describing physical symptoms experienced in solitary confinement we
present a quantitative analysis of the prevalence of somatic concerns in our random sample of
106 people held in IMU and the variability of these concerns across time and housing location
In 2017 15 of participants reported having clinically significant (formally defined as a sever-
ity of 4 or higher out of a possible 7) somatic concerns (formally defined as ldquoconcern over pres-
ent bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment [21] In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80
respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 reported clinically signifi-
cant ratings of somatic concern
While ratings of clinically significant somatic concern mostly varied within participants
over time our analysis indicated some persistence of somatic issues across the two assessment
periods Of those who reported clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were
re-interviewed in 2018 (12 respondents 4 were unavailable for re-interview) 25 (3 respon-
dents) indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic issues in 2018 An exact McNe-
marrsquos test revealed no statistically significant relationship between the proportion of
respondents reporting clinically significant somatic concerns in 2017 and 2018 (p = 0 0) In the initial 2017 assessment all study subjects were housed in IMU At the time of re-
interview in 2018 52 respondents had moved into the general prison population while 28
remained in IMU Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 (6 of 28) reported clinically sig-
nificant somatic concerns compared to just 8 of those housed in the general prison popula-
tion (4 of 52) While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
concern in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 confidence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 7 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test) No significant differences were observed in the distribution
of clinically significant somatic concern ratings across racial and ethnic groups
Complementing the BPRS assessment data from the random sample of 106 individuals in
IMU custody survey data collected from the full IMU population in 2017 further indicated the
prevalence of somatic concerns among this population Of the 225 survey respondents 63
expressed health concerns 48 were taking medication 17 had arthritis and 8 had experi-
enced a fall in solitary confinement Importantly for the analysis of emerging symptoms in par-
ticular 82 replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo
while in the IMU These survey results like the BPRS somatic concern results benefit from tri-
angulation with our qualitative data
Specifying physical symptoms
We identify three categories of physical symptoms people experience in solitary confinement
each associated with different aspects of IMU housing symptoms associated with deprivation
conditions symptoms associated with deprivation policies limiting access to healthcare and
chronic musculoskeletal pain exacerbated by the intersection of deprivation conditions and
deprivation policies In each category we analyze how the institution of solitary confinement
shapes both physical health outcomes and perceptions of health for people housed in solitary
confinement revealing both the mechanisms of physical health deterioration and the accentu-
ated comorbidity of physical and mental health in solitary confinement
Deprivation conditions Our participants described a range of physical ailments directly
connected to the conditions of their confinement especially the various deprivations of movement
provisions (from food to toiletries) and human contact inherent in the institutional restrictions
defining solitary confinement Skin irritations and weight fluctuations were the most common of
these participants experienced both as co-morbid with anxiety and other health issues
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They
understood these conditions as being directly associated the poor air and water quality irritat-
ing hygiene products and lack of sun exposure inherent to their conditions of solitary confine-
ment People in the IMU (unlike those in the general prison population) usually cannot
purchase or trade for alternative higher-quality hygiene products their cells have limited nat-
ural light (at best a window far above eye-level at worst no window) and even the exercise
areas frequently have limited natural light Indeed research has documented how isolation can
cause vitamin D deficiency due to lack of natural light exposure [66]
As Joseph (white) explained an ostensibly trivial physical problem like dandruff can
inspire a sense of helplessness in the IMU
Well I try not to [think about] what happens to my body Because yoursquore going to obsess
on it probably Minor things become huge when yoursquore in segregation and so something
that youndashyou as being free in society can alleviate by going to you know to [the store] or
whatever and just get a dandruff shampoo You canrsquot do that here And kiting medical and
telling them ldquoHey I have a severe problem with dermatitis and my headrsquos itching and Irsquove
got bleeding scabs on my headrdquo or whatever the case may be therersquos nothing that we can
do here Yoursquore SOL [shit out of luck]
Josephrsquos inability to treat his skin irritations himself led to both helplessness and obsessive-
ness further exacerbating the discomfort and potential health consequences of the issue This
case illustrates how a free personrsquos flaky skin or minor embarrassment becomes a potentially
severe medical problem in solitary confinement entailing bleeding scabs on the scalp
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 8 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Participants frequently experienced fluctuations in body weight and as with skin irritations
connected these symptoms to conditions inherent to solitary confinement What started as
simple observations about diet exercise and appearance often turned into analyses of the
impact of conditions of confinement on physical as well as mental health Simon (Black) dis-
cussed being ldquoreal worriedrdquo about his weight
The only reason I know theyrsquore not really giving us the calorie needs theyrsquore supposed to
give us is because I feel like Irsquom losing more muscle than I am fat And to lose more muscle
than fat is because yoursquore not getting the nutrients that you need
Not only is weight loss a significant source of anxiety for Simon but he connects the depri-
vations of confinementndashthe lack of nutritious food and sufficient caloriesndashto physical changes
in his body Whether his explanation is correct or simple lack of physical activity is more likely
to explain the changes accurately IMU confinement ostensibly produced the change
Participants also described restricting their own dietary intake beyond the already limited
rations (usually calculated to meet the minimum daily calorie intake standards) for a variety
of reasons from the quality of the food to their emotional state Michael (Latino) described
being suspicious of staff having tampered with his food ldquoI got my breakfast bowl and there
was a tear on the plastic [ ] Sometimes your mind plays tricks on you like theyrsquore trying to
poison you or somethingrdquo While Michael noted that his suspicions were likely just in his
mind Philip (Black) asserted ldquoThey was poisoning my foodndashthey control everything They
can even manipulate the water Irsquom so fucking serious this place is highly technologically
advancedrdquo For those like Michael and Philip psychological states associated with the condi-
tions of confinement (eg suspiciousness paranoia and potentially psychosis) caused them to
restrict their food intake resulting in weight loss Indeed both Michael and Philip had docu-
mented diagnoses of mental illness in their medical files bipolar disorder and undifferentiated
schizophrenia respectively Food restrictions can of course lead to more imminently danger-
ous conditions such as dehydration electrolyte imbalances or renal failurendashnone of which are
likely to be subject to objective evaluation in the IMU as we discuss further in the next sub-
section on the impacts of deprivation policies
Some prisoners made a more direct connection between their mental health their dietary
intake and their physical health For instance Kai (Native American) said
I donrsquot work out because I have a problem breathing This is the first time Irsquove ever done
a program [IMU term] where Irsquove felt like I was breaking Because before Irsquod be working
out Now Irsquom stuck in this Irsquom battling mentally with everything going on Which
affected my body effects my eating sometimes Irsquoll just take the [food] tray but Irsquoll flush the
stuff down the toilet
As Kai suggests in the IMU exercise functions not only as a means to practice physical fit-
ness but also to provide structure for people to manage both their days and the mental strain of
being in isolation When asked a general question like ldquohow are you doing in the IMUrdquo many
participants like Kai referenced whether or not they were engaging in exercise as a way to
gauge how they were faring overall People like Kai shared feelings of lethargy or feeling too
overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day induced by long periods in solitary confine-
ment Their weight fluctuated during these cycles going down with regular and social exercise
routines going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exer-
cise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations high-
light the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 9 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Deprivation policies Our participants described multiple situations in which official
IMU policies and unofficial IMU practices exacerbated their physical ailments especially their
chronic health problems Such policies and practices included the prioritization of security
over care in emergency situations disruptions in care upon transfer into the IMU and over-
whelming administrative hurdles to accessing care in the first place If prisons are largely
unequipped to provide the appropriate care and environment for chronic medical problems
[67 31] our findings reveal both the specific mechanisms by which solitary confinement poli-
cies amplify the usual bureaucratic challenges of accessing healthcare in prison and the kinds
of physical health problems that go unaddressed as a result
First in cases of medical emergencies people housed in the IMU have response buttons in
their cells they can press to alert staff However many of the people we interviewed both
doubted whether staff would respond swiftly enough in an actual emergency and worried
about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response
if medical staff ultimately deemed their problem non-emergent Indeed prisoners perceived
IMU policies as systematically prioritizing incapacitation over medical attention Carl (white)
described an incident where he experienced delayed care and was pepper sprayed after having
suffered from a seizure all because he was unable to comply with orders to stand following the
episode
I had a serious seizure And I was laying on the floor and I had defecated I was laying in a
puddle of puke Well [the guards] had come to the door and I guess they had called med-
ical and they were standing there for 45 minutes yelling ldquoStand up and cuff up so we can
give you medical attentionrdquo They did not pop the door and go in there and give me medical
attention And so unknown to me they popped the cuff port and they sprayed OC [pepper
spray] in there And then they came in They noticed that I was unconscious and finally a
nurse looked at my medical file and shersquos like ldquohersquos epilepticrdquo
In the tense environment of the IMU where staff manage people with histories of violating
prison rules assaulting staff and often serious mental health needs immediate security con-
cerns readily take priority over assessing medical histories and providing healthcare
Second simply being transferred into the IMU often disrupted care in dangerous ways For
instance Julian (Hawaiian) described how when he was transferred into a new solitary con-
finement unit he had to restart the process of seeking treatment for (and even simple acknowl-
edgement of) recurring kidney stones Whereas he had fought and been able to receive x-rays
and medication to help manage his kidney pain at his prior institution he now found this fight
to be futile at his new facility ldquoTheyrsquore just going to take me out of room take me over there to
medical and theyrsquore going to be like oh herersquos the hot water or hot bag or whateverrdquo And
Tony (Native Americanwhite) described a battery of physical and mental health issuesndashan
enlarged prostate a painful cyst that needed to be surgically removed varicose veins ldquochronic
suicidal thoughtsrdquo anxiety and depressionndashall requiring medications which he had difficulty
maintaining access to in the IMU For instance he described how both his Amitriptyline
which partly treated his periodic limb movement sleep disorder and his seizure medication
Dilantin were both discontinued in the IMU resulting in serious injuries to his foot and head
Third a number of bureaucratic hurdles and barriers discouraged people in the IMU from
attempting to access healthcare at all even in potentially life-threatening situations In order to
see a medical professional people isolated in the IMU must fill out a paper request (a ldquokiterdquo)
and hand it to a correctional officer passing by or report a concern to a nurse who makes
daily rounds passing by each cell in the IMU The medical response happens either ldquocellfrontrdquo
with the person talking to the medical professional through his cell door in earshot of others
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 10 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
held in solitary confinement or ldquoby escortrdquo with the person in handcuffs and leg-cuffs if not
also belly chains and a hood usually accompanied by at least two to four correctional officers
to a medical treatment area Vitamins and over-the-counter medications like Tylenol or as-
needed medications like asthma inhalers are kept outside of the cell and available only at spec-
ified times or again by paper kite request Throughout WADOC people must pay $4 for
non-emergency medical care (unless they are indigent in which case WADOC provides care
without a co-pay) but people held in the IMU have more restrictive caps on their overall
spending for any needs including healthcare food and toiletries proportionally raising the
relative cost of seeking care for non-emergency symptoms
These policies in combination with negative perceptions about the quality of care available
to them dissuaded participants from seeking medical services Deon (Black) described new
and unfamiliar ldquobreathing problemsrdquo and rising ldquoblood pressurerdquo in IMU but felt that seeking
medical attention would be useless
Itrsquos pointless for me to knock on the window and ask the nurse ldquoHey nurse do thisrdquo
Because every time I knock on the windowndashit is pointless because the only thing the DOC
wants is money It is money I think people in the cell should be important And itrsquos a
long time but Irsquod just rather wait till I get out
Later in the interview Deon links his rising blood pressure to his isolation ldquoI never had
blood pressure problems until I went to this IMUrdquo Because Deon does not expect to be treated
with care or dignity he avoids medical treatment As a result his new breathing issues and ris-
ing blood pressure went unnoticed by medical staff and Deon did not find out the cause
Blake (white) described experiencing unfamiliar physical health symptoms in the IMU for
which he was also hopeless about receiving any medical assistance
Irsquove been told I have a heart murmur but for like last two weeks Irsquove been feeling my
heart like feeling weird like it flutters once in a while [I] just donrsquot tell nobody because
they wonrsquot do nothing about it unless yoursquore actually having a heart attack or unless you
declare a medical emergency theyrsquoll pull you out take your vitals and then charge you 4
bucks If I have a heart attack or donrsquot have a heart attack it donrsquot matter
Not only did Blake like Deon doubt whether a prison medical provider would believe him
and try to help him but he was further dissuaded from seeking treatment by the $4 institution-
ally-imposed cost for non-emergency treatment Four dollars is arguably worth much more in
prison that it would be even to a destitute person on the outside and worth more still to some-
one in the IMU Under WADOC policy people in IMU are only allowed to spend $10 per
week on store items such as coffee pastries and deodorant The $4 medical fee would absorb
nearly half of this weekly spending cap Blake might have had clinically insignificant subjective
palpitations or the onset of atrial fibrillation following an undiagnosed myocardial infarction
his confinement status rendered clarification functionally unavailable
Like many other participants Deon and Blake expressed a sense of futility about seeking
medical assistance while in the IMU dissuaded by bureaucratic hurdles from perceived dis-
missiveness and indignity (exemplified in the problem of dual loyalty [67]) to actual costs of
care Futility in turn led to non-evaluation of emerging medical problems Still Deon and
Blake expressed a passive acceptance of their situation ldquoitrsquos pointlessrdquo and ldquoit donrsquot matterrdquo
This hopelessness reflects a precarity unique to solitary confinement wondering whether med-
ications would be provided and refills renewed whether the severity of ailments would be
acknowledged and whether medical emergencies would be addressed or instead treated as
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 11 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
security threats As our participantsrsquo experiences suggest solitary confinement carries the
additional punishment of substandard access to health care
Exacerbating musculoskeletal pain Participants spoke frequently about one specific
chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain The experiences of people in
solitary confinement with chronic musculoskeletal pain reveal how the prior two categories of
symptoms we analyze those associated with deprivation conditions and those associated with
deprivation policies in solitary confinement interact to exacerbate physical health problems
While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical
injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated
and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to
them in solitary confinement
For instance Victor (Latino) described his frustrations with attempts to get care let alone
relief from the pain of his sciatica
Irsquove been told I have nothing wrong with me but I have been hurt and they took x-rays of
my back and they found that the disks are in there or something thatrsquos triggering some
nerves And I still got a little bit of time left and they just opened up an Ibuprofen right
now And that stuff doesnrsquot work So what can you do
Victorrsquos medical file highlights persistence of chronic pain in his back and hips and notes
that he avoided sitting down for longer than 5ndash10 minutes Not only did participants describe
untreated pain but they described the anxiety associated with the lack of treatment Isaac
(BlackLatino) described how he experienced both quad and hamstring pain in the IMU and
how this escalated his physical health concerns ldquoIrsquoll start thinking like oh Irsquom laying in bed
too much Maybe my muscles are starting to rot you know eating on themselvesrdquo In a similar
sentiment Tim (white) stated ldquoMy body is likendashI canrsquot explain it Like my skeleton feels like
my skeletonrsquos broken or somethingrdquo While Victor must bear persistent pain and the anxiety
that he will likely have to continue to suffer Isaac and Timrsquos experiences are more reflective of
somatization or the expression of psychological distress through physical symptoms [69]
These participants highlight the complex comorbidity between musculoskeletal pain and men-
tal health in isolation an inverse experience of physical pain Tyler (white) discussing his sco-
liosis made a direct connection between his untreated pain and his mental health ldquoMental
health and things that go through your head just because of this when you got pain shooting
up into your brain and you guys arenrsquot fixing itrdquo
Pain and anxiety in turn interfered with other aspects of IMU existence Craig (white)
described how an untreated knee injury was causing him ldquomoderate to severe painrdquo in combi-
nation with anxiety about how he would re-enter society when released directly from solitary
confinement together these experiences interfered with his everyday activities including his
ability to communicate with his family ldquoI was in the middle of actually writing my mom a let-
ter and I was going to tell her about you know they still havenrsquot done anything with my
knee I couldnrsquot write the letter anymore I just got so mad I was so mad I really couldnrsquot
even focus on anythingrdquo Craigrsquos medical file affirms his complaint documenting knee swell-
ing and chronic extension tendonitis but also indicating no abnormalities were found
People living in solitary confinement are left with very few options to effectively manage
persistent pain which appears to foster more maladaptive behavior such as rumination stress
and despair within a highly restrictive and stimuli-depleted environment [68ndash71] Along with
bearing the institutional monotony medical precariousness and procedural strictures of soli-
tary confinement onersquos own body becomes a challenge to withstand [72 73]
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 12 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
RacialEthnic disproportionalities
We now turn to reporting the race and ethnic disparities in the Washington state prison popu-
lation overall (compared to the statewide adult population) and in solitary confinement spe-
cifically (compared to the general prison population) These disparities suggest that the
various mechanisms by which solitary confinement impacts health and well-being are likely to
be disproportionately experienced across race and ethnic lines
We analyze administrative data provided by WADOC and Census Bureau population esti-
mates Black non-Latino individuals represented only 37 of adults in Washington state in
2017 but they comprised 179 of the general prison population [74] Similarly Latino indi-
viduals represented 103 of the statewide adult population but 136 of the prison popula-
tion Conversely both White non-Latinos and AsianPacific Islanders Native Americans and
mixed-race individuals (grouped within ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo) were somewhat under-repre-
sented in the general prison population relative to the statewide adult population (see Fig 1)
Differences in racial and ethnic composition of the general prison population and the state-
wide adult population are statistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Within prison walls we find evidence of further racial and ethnic disproportionalities in
housing placement Comparing those housed in restrictive IMU confinement to those housed
in the general population we find that prisoners who self-identify as ldquoLatino Any Racerdquo and
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo ethnicity are over-represented in IMU To characterize the scale of differ-
ences in the racialethnic composition of the IMU and general prison populations we calcu-
lated disproportionality or prevalence ratios as the proportion of each racialethnic group in a
given population divided by the proportion of that racialethnic group in the reference popu-
lation Here Latinos are over-represented within the IMU participant group by a factor of 17
relative to their representation in the general prison population and those grouped in the
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo category are over-represented in the IMU sample by a factor of 26 relative
to the general prison population Conversely White non-Latino individuals are under-repre-
sented in the IMU sample relative to the general prison population Likewise and in contrast
to the gross disproportionality documented in the general prison population Black non-
Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample relative to the gen-
eral prison population 113 of the IMU sample identified as Black non-Latino compared
with 179 of the general prison population The difference in the racial and ethnic composi-
tion of those in long-term solitary confinement compared with the general population was sta-
tistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Discussion
A popular analogy likens prison to a chronic illness it disrupts daily life interrupts routines
[72] spreads risk like a contagious disease [75] and models like an epidemiological problem
[76 30] While the study of the physical effects of incarceration has developed over the last
decade there is a serious gap in the literature in understanding the experiences and outcomes
of physical health in isolation We are just beginning to understand the medical correlates of
solitary confinement their comorbidity with mental health and overall implications for pris-
onersrsquo suffering [72] Integrating surveys interviews BPRS scores medical and disciplinary
file reviews and administrative data the scale and array of our research represents one of the
more robust studies of solitary confinement to date [20] The multi-method research presented
here offers a first step not only towards understanding some typical medical problems of soli-
tary confinement but also towards understanding the analytical challenges of an environment
in which physical and psychological problems are immediately concomitant and objective
clarification is often unavailable
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 13 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Fig 1 Racial and ethnic composition of IMU sample general prison population and Washington State 2017 US Census Bureau
Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and
States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun dagger Authorsrsquo calculations The total prison population file included 17943 individuals in
DOC prison custody on July 1 2017 For comparison purposes the ldquogeneral prison populationrdquo excludes those returned to prison on
violations of release or sentence conditions those in an IMU unit on the index date and those on a maximum custody status (n = 1970)
as well as those in the IMU sample (n = 106) Dagger No significant differences in racialethnic composition were found between the IMU
sample and larger IMU population on the index date using raceethnicity data from DOC These data reflect self-reported raceethnicity
during participant interviews ^ OtherUnknown includes individuals of two or more races AsianPacific Islander Native American
Alaska Native and unknown raceethnicity information
httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510g001
We find that solitary confinement constitutes not just a mental but also a physical health
risk It exacerbates well-documented physical health ldquosymptomsrdquo of incarceration from dis-
ruptions of daily life and routines to undiagnosed untreated or mis-treated ailments [1 30
38] These initial symptoms in turn produce other risks to the extent respondents are accu-
rately reporting weight fluctuations in solitary confinement this physical symptom has detri-
mental health implications weight fluctuation itself is associated with adverse cardiovascular
and psychological outcomes [77 78] Likewise musculoskeletal pain increases multimorbidity
and its sequelae are tightly unified in their impact on disability [79]
These health concerns likely have a grossly disparate impact on communities of color just
as incarceration is a health stratifying institution for prisoners their families and communi-
ties so too does solitary confinement appear to exacerbate racial health inequities While we
find that Black non-Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample
relative to the general prison population we find that Latino and OtherMixed Race prisoners
are disproportionately over-represented in solitary confinement in WADOC just as other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 14 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
studies have documented disproportionately high representations of racial and ethnic minori-
ties in other statesrsquo uses of solitary confinement [22 41 43] We further find that prisoners of
all races describe similar physical health challenges and complaints while in solitary confine-
ment In sum people of color face a disproportionate risk of being placed in solitary confine-
ment such racial disparities in turn mean that the physical health symptoms associated with
or possibly caused by these conditions of confinement are likely to fall disproportionately on
certain groups Though we do not explore other risk factors for over-representation in solitary
confinement in this paper we and others have documented serious mental illness [20 80]
transgender identification [81] and pregnant women [82] as particularly vulnerable to both
incarceration and solitary confinement suggesting additional sub-groups who might face dis-
proportionate and unique risks of physical health problems in solitary confinement
If anything the evidence we present here understates the prevalence and intensity of the symp-
toms we document First Washington State is a progressive system actively engaged in both limit-
ing the application and the duration of solitary confinement and developing measures to mitigate
its harmful effects from better mental health training for correctional staff to more sustained
group contact for prisoners in IMUs conditions and their physical effects are undoubtedly
worse in many if not most other states [20 42 44] Second the BPRS somatic concerns scores
we present focus on the two weeks prior to assessment so likely underrepresent the cumulative
incidence of somatic concerns in the study sample over time Third our exceptionally large ran-
dom sample size for an in-depth mixed methods study of a solitary confinement population was
still not powered to establish statistically significant differences between interview subjects in the
IMU in year one (2017) and those out of the IMU in year two (2018)ndashotherwise important com-
parison groups for understanding differences in either somatic concerns measures or physical
symptom specifications Fourth both the Washington state population and state prison popula-
tion have proportionately more white people than some other states and prisons where racial dis-
parities in both prison and solitary confinement may be even more significant
While our findings do not establish either how prevalent the symptoms and mechanisms of
suffering we specified are among people in solitary confinement as compared to the general
prison population or whether solitary confinement in fact directly causes these symptoms
recent research suggests that at least some of the symptoms our respondents reported like
hypertension are significantly associated with long-term isolation [83 45] Although the evi-
dence is clear that solitary confinement poses serious health risks [54 45] our research high-
lights the importance of continuing to document and analyze these risks especially from a
multi-method perspective triangulating administrative population-level data with objective
scales like the BPRS subjective descriptions of experiences from surveys and interviews and
corroboration from medical file reviews
First documenting physical health problems provides a critical means to elucidate the sever-
ity of deprivations in treatment environmental conditions and exercise and nutrition [84 85]
inherent in solitary confinement If incarceration is experienced fundamentally through control
and restriction of the body this is all the more true in solitary confinement where prisoners are
subjected to extreme forms of control while being entirely reliant on others for accessing basic
necessities from food to healthcare Our participants experienced the deprivations of solitary
confinement as exacerbating their health problems which shaped their health experiences as
punitive Otherwise medically trivial conditions quickly become grave in solitary ldquodandruffrdquo
can become a bleeding scalp wound a four-dollar co-payment blurs the difference between sub-
jective palpitations and an unstable arrhythmia and unused muscles ldquorotrdquo Physical suffering
reveals itself to be a crucial dimension of experience in solitary confinement
Second to the extent physical symptoms in particular are more familiar more readily
labeled and less stigmatized than mental health issues they may provide a window into other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 15 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
less physically tangible pains of confinement in solitary or elsewhere [84 85] The visuality of
spectacular forms of suffering in carceral institutions is only made possible by and through
mundane phenomenon that our participants elucidate through their discussions of everyday
physical experiences [86] Indeed attending to peoplersquos physical health in solitary confinement
reveals the irreducible relationship between the body mental health and highly restrictive
conditions of confinement Whether they exercise to the point of physical debilitation to keep
their minds busy refuse to eat because they do not trust their food is safe or avoid medical
care out of a hopelessness of being treated with dignity the physical and psychological are inti-
mately bounded in peoplersquos experiences in prison Examining physical suffering in solitary
confinement then becomes a tool for understanding suffering in prison more broadly and
especially the comorbidity of physical and mental suffering
Third the challenges we document in identifying and specifying physical symptoms in soli-
tary confinement reveal not just the interrelationship between symptoms conditions and poli-
cies but institutional mechanisms exacerbating both the identification and treatment of
physical problems in prison In many cases our respondents had no hope of establishing what
was physically wrong with them let alone whether the conditions of their confinement caused
the physical ailments because they either could not get or avoided medical treatment While
both community standard and continuity of care is an issue in prison generally [67] solitary
confinement widens these service gaps The phenomenon of dual loyalty which describes how
the patient-provider relationship within prison can be subsumed by correctional directives of
control and mistrust of incarcerated people [67] is acutely relevant in the context of solitary
confinement where both control and mistrust are especially prevalent [87 88]
In sum examining solitary confinement and documenting its affects provides an important
magnifying lens for understanding prison and its affects more broadly not only in elucidating
the mechanisms of harm but also in developing responses to mitigate these harms Ninety-five
percent or more of all prisoners will eventually return home to our communities [4 5] and
many will have spent time in solitary confinement Nearly one-in-five people in prison spends
time in solitary confinement each year and one-in-ten spends 30 days or more in these condi-
tions [3] These numbers will only increase in the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic
which has justified facility-wide ldquolockdownsrdquo imposing restrictions similar to those in soli-
tary-confinement in prisons across the United States as well as actual solitary confinement
placements for infected and exposed prisoners [89] To the extent that solitary confinement
undercuts treatment and care in and beyond prison it undermines the public health of those
incarcerated and those returning to our communities
Supporting information
S1 Text IMU survey
(PDF)
S2 Text Interview instrument
(DOC)
S1 Checklist Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ) 32-item
checklist
(DOCX)
S1 Quotations
(DOCX)
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 16 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Author Contributions
Conceptualization Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter
Formal analysis Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Methodology Justin D Strong Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Project administration Justin D Strong
Writing ndash original draft Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca
Tublitz Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie
Pifer Thomas R Blair
Writing ndash review amp editing Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Dallas Augustine Melissa Bar-
ragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie Pifer Thomas R Blair
References
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4 Administrators Association of State Correctional Administrators Yale Law School Arthur Liman Public
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7 Grassian S Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Wash UJL amp Polrsquoy 2006 22325ndash84
8 Kupers TA What to do with the survivors Coping with the long-term effects of isolated confinement
Crim Justice Behav 2008 Aug 35(8)1005ndash16
9 Griffin E Breaking menrsquos minds Behavior control and human experimentation at the federal prison in
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PLOS ONE The body in isolation
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30 Wildeman C Wang EA Mass incarceration public health and widening inequality in the USA Lancet
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of prison release on HIV diagnoses in the US South PloS one 2018 Jun 11 13(6)e0198258 https
doiorg101371journalpone0198258 PMID 29889837
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nesses J Health Soc Behav 2008 Mar 49(1)56ndash71 httpsdoiorg101177002214650804900105
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Health Disparities 2014 Mar 1 1(1)21ndash8 httpsdoiorg101007s40615-013-0003-1 PMID 24812594
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of health for Black men in the United States Sociol Compass 2018 Mar 12(3)e12566
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ing DC (US) National Institute of Justice 2018 21 p Report No 252062
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42 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States
Am J Public Health 2015 Jan 105(1)18ndash26 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2014302205 PMID 25393185
43 Schlanger M Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial disparities
Mich J Race amp L 2012 18(1)241ndash50
44 Reiter KA Parole snitch or die Californiarsquos supermax prisons and prisoners 1997ndash2007 Punishm
Soc 2012 Dec 14(5)530ndash63
45 Williams BA Li A Ahalt C Coxson P Kahn JG Bibbins-Domingo K The cardiovascular health burdens
of solitary confinement J Gen Intern Med 2019 Oct 1 34(10)1977ndash80 httpsdoiorg101007
s11606-019-05103-6 PMID 31228050
46 Dye MH Deprivation importation and prison suicide combined effects of institutional conditions and
inmate composition J Crim Justice 2010 Jul 1 38(4)796ndash806
47 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S Hadler J Lee D Alper H et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-
harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014 Mar 104(3)442ndash7 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH
2013301742 PMID 24521238
48 Lobel J Akil H Law amp neuroscience The case of solitary confinement Daedalus 2018 Oct1 47(4)61ndash75
49 Zigmond MJ Smeyne RJ Use of animals to study the neurobiological effects of isolation In Lobel J
Smith PS editors Solitary confinement Effects practices and pathways toward reform New York
Oxford University Press 2020 [cited 2020 Jul 14] Chapter 13
50 Stahn AC Gunga HC Kohlberg E Gallinat J Dinges DF Kuhn S Brain changes in response to long
Antarctic expeditions N Engl J Med 2019 Dec 5 381(23)2273ndash5 httpsdoiorg101056
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51 Smith DG Neuroscientists make a case against solitary confinement prolonged social isolation can do
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52 Ranapurwala SI Shanahan ME Alexandridis AA Proescholdbell SK Naumann RB Edwards D Jr
et al Opioid overdose mortality among former North Carolina inmates 2000ndash2015 Am J Public Health
2018 Sep 108(9)1207ndash13 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2018304514 PMID 30024795
53 Wildeman C Andersen LH Solitary confinement placement and post-release mortality risk among for-
merly incarcerated individuals a population-based study Lancet Public Health 2020 Feb 1 5(2)e107ndash
13 httpsdoiorg101016S2468-2667(19)30271-3 PMID 32032555
54 Brinkley-Rubinstein L Sivaraman J Rosen DL Cloud DH Junker G Proescholdbell S et al Associa-
tion of restrictive housing during incarceration with mortality after release JAMA Netw Open 2019 Oct
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abstract2752350 httpsdoiorg101001jamanetworkopen201912516 PMID 31584680
55 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional populations in the United States 2016 Washington DC Depart-
ment of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 14 p Report No NCJ
251211
56 Phipps PA Gagliardi GJ Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and ser-
vices Interim Report Olympia WA Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 May 37 p
Report No 03-05-1901
57 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J of Public Health 2005 Oct 95
(10)1692ndash5
58 Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates Santa Monica CA The
Rand Corporation 1982 Nov Report No N-1635-NIJ
59 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berke-
ley CA University of California Press 2014
60 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up meth-
ods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs 2009 Sep 70
(5)751ndash61 httpsdoiorg1015288jsad200970751 PMID 19737500
61 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach popula-
tion Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2016 May 17 113(20)5477ndash85
62 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation
and normalization in Danish prisons Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
63 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis Thousand
Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
64 Chun Tie Y Birks M Francis K Grounded theory research A design framework for novice researchers
SAGE open medicine 2019 Jan 71ndash8
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65 Berzofsky M and Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) Sample Design Evaluation and Rec-
ommendations Washington DC US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017
66 Nwosu BU Maranda L Berry R Colocino B Flores CD Sr Folkman K et al The vitamin D status of
prison inmates PloS one 2014 Mar 5 9(3)e90623 httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0090623
PMID 24598840
67 Pont J Enggist S Stover H Williams B Greifinger R Wolff H Prison health care governance guaran-
teeing clinical independence American journal of public health 2018 Apr 108(4)472ndash6 httpsdoiorg
102105AJPH2017304248 PMID 29470125
68 Brosschot JF Gerin W Thayer JF The perseverative cognition hypothesis A review of worry pro-
longed stress-related physiological activation and health Journal of psychosomatic research 2006
Feb 1 60(2)113ndash24 httpsdoiorg101016jjpsychores200506074 PMID 16439263
69 Stemmet L Roger D Kuntz J Borrill J Ruminating about the past or ruminating about the futuremdash
which has the bigger impact on health An exploratory study Current Psychology 2018 Jan 13 1ndash7
70 Laws B Crewe B Emotion regulation among male prisoners Theoretical Criminology 2016 Nov 20
(4)529ndash47
71 Greer K Walking an emotional tightrope Managing emotions in a womenrsquos prison Symbolic Interac-
tion 2002 Feb 25(1)117ndash39
72 Choudhry K Armstrong D Dregan A Prisons and Embodiment Self-Management Strategies of an
Incarcerated Population Journal of Correctional Health Care 2019 Oct 25(4)338ndash50 httpsdoiorg
1011771078345819880240 PMID 31722608
73 Western B Homeward Life in the year after prison Russell Sage Foundation 2018 May 4
74 US Census Bureau Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age
Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun
75 Lum K Swarup S Eubank S Hawdon J The contagious nature of imprisonment an agent-based
model to explain racial disparities in incarceration rates Journal of the Royal Society Interface 2014
Sep 6 11(98)20140409
76 Dumont DM Brockmann B Dickman S Alexander N Rich JD Public health and the epidemic of incar-
ceration Annual review of public health 2012 Apr 21 33325ndash39 httpsdoiorg101146annurev-
publhealth-031811-124614 PMID 22224880
77 Zhang Y Hou F Li J Yu H Li L Hu S et al The association between weight fluctuation and all-cause
mortality A systematic review and meta-analysis Medicine 2019 Oct 98(42)
78 Soslashrensen TI Rissanen A Korkeila M Kaprio J Intention to lose weight weight changes and 18-y mor-
tality in overweight individuals without co-morbidities PLoS medicine 2005 Jun 28 2(6)e171 https
doiorg101371journalpmed0020171 PMID 15971946
79 Blyth FM Briggs AM Schneider CH Hoy DG March LM The global burden of musculoskeletal painmdash
where to from here American journal of public health 2019 Jan 01 09(1)35ndash40
80 Patler C Sacha JO Branic N The black box within a black box Solitary confinement practices in a sub-
set of US immigrant detention facilities Journal of Population Research 2018 Dec 354 httpsdoi
org101007s12546-018-9209-8
81 Andasheva F Arenrsquot I a Woman Deconstructing Sex Discrimination and Freeing Transgender Women
from Solitary Confinement FIU L Rev 2016 12117
82 Knittel AK Resolving health disparities for women involved in the criminal justice system North Carolina
medical journal 2019 Nov 01 80(6)363ndash6 httpsdoiorg1018043ncm806363 PMID 31685574
83 Hawkley Test Ashker v Governor of California No 409-cv-05796-CW (ND California 2015)
84 Sexton L Penal subjectivities Developing a theoretical framework for penal consciousness Punish-
ment amp Society 2015 Jan 17(1)114ndash36
85 Crewe B Warr J Bennett P Smith A The emotional geography of prison life Theoretical Criminology
2014 Feb 18(1)56ndash74
86 Corcoran MS Spectacular suffering Transgressive performance in penal activism Theoretical Crimi-
nology 2019 Jan 11 httpsdoiorg1011771362480618819796
87 Glowa-Kollisch S Graves J Dickey N MacDonald R Rosner Z Waters A et al Data- driven human
rights using dual loyalty trainings to promote the care of vulnerable patients in jail Health Hum Rights
2015 Jun 1 17(1)124ndash35
88 Blair TR Reiter KA Letter to the editor and author response Solitary confinement and mental illness
Perspectives 2015 Jul 2
89 Cloud D Augustine D Ahalt C Williams B The ethical use of medical isolationndashnot solitary confine-
mentndashto reduce COVID-19 transmission in correctional settings AMEND 2020 April
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 20 20
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE
See next page
112
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
Psychological Distress in Solitary Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018
Keramet Reiter PhD JD Joseph Ventura PhD David Lovell PhD MSW Dallas Augustine MA Melissa Barragan MA Thomas Blair MD MS Kelsie Chesnut MA Pasha Dashtgard MA EdM Gabriela Gonzalez MA Natalie Pifer PhD JD and Justin Strong MA
Objectives To specify symptoms and measure prevalence of psychological distress among incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement
Methods We gathered data via semistructured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric
Rating Scale (BPRS) assessments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for 106 randomly selected people in solitary confinement in the Washington State
Department of Corrections in 2017 We performed 1-year follow-up interviews
and BPRS assessments with 80 of these incarcerated people and we present the
results of our qualitative content analysis and descriptive statistics Results BPRS results showed clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety or
guilt among half of our research sample Administrative data showed disproportionately
high rates of serious mental illness and self-harming behavior compared with general prison populations Interview content analysis revealed additional symptoms including
social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity Conclusions Our coordinated study of rating scale interview and administrative data
illustrates the public health crisis of solitary confinement Because 95 or more of all incarcerated people including those who experienced solitary confinement are even-tually released understanding disproportionate psychopathology matters for de-veloping prevention policies and addressing the unique needs of people who have
experienced solitary confinement an extreme element of mass incarceration (Am J
Public Health 2020110S56ndashS62 doi102105AJPH2019305375)
few procedural protections limited available alternative responses and no external over-sight2 Researchers and policymakers are therefore limited not only in access to data and populations but also by these populationsrsquo fluidity
A standard instrument for assessing psy-chological impacts of incarceration is the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) Originally developed to rate the severity of symptoms in hospitalized psychiatric patients and track changes in status over time1314 the BPRS is increasingly used for research within carceral settings12151617 The current scale assesses 24 observable or self-reported symptoms Extensive research on the BPRSrsquos reliability and validity confirms its efficacy in identify-ing indicators of serious mental illness14
In Washington State interviewers ad-ministered the BPRS to a random sample of 87 incarcerated people during qualitative interviews (and also conducted 122 medical chart reviews)1915 concluding that solitary confinement reveals ldquoa concentration of some of the most important negative effects of the entire prison complexrdquo1(p1692) In a widely cited subsequent study in Colorado the BPRS was included in a battery of tests designed to measure psychological ldquocon-structsrdquo associated with solitary confinement (for 270 matched participants) but generated
Long-term solitary confinement expanded across the United States in the 1980s by
1997 nearly every state had built a ldquosuper-maxrdquo creating an estimated total of 20 000 new solitary cells12 Human rights agencies characterize the practice as torture34 policy analysts criticize it as expensive and ineffec-tive24 Yet the epidemiological basis for understanding solitary confinement is weak Current estimates of the annual US solitary confinement population vary from 80 000 to 250 00056 Likewise the conditions (how much isolation with how few privileges) purposes (discipline protection or institu-tional security) and labels (administrative segregation supermax restrictive housing intensive management) defining solitary confinement are contested256 Many studies document psychological harms of
S56 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al
segregation including associations between solitary confinement and self-harm anxiety depression paranoia and aggression among other symptoms7ndash9 but other recent find-ings suggest that psychological impacts are limited10ndash12 Correctional officials use solitary confinement at their discretion often with
ABOUT THE AUTHORS Keramet Reiter is with the Department of Criminology Law and Society and the School of Law University of California Irvine Joseph Ventura is with the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles David Lovell is with the School of Nursing University of Washington Seattle Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut and Gabriela Gonzalez are doctoral candidates in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Thomas Blair is with the Department of Psychiatry Southern California Permanente Medical Group Downey Pasha Dashtgard is a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological Science University of California Irvine Natalie Pifer is with the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice University of Rhode Island Kingston Justin Strong is a doctoral student in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine
Correspondence should be sent to Keramet Reiter 3373 Social Ecology II Irvine CA 92697 (e-mail reiterkuciedu) Reprints can be ordered at httpwwwajphorg by clicking the ldquoReprintsrdquo link
This article was accepted September 5 2019 doi 102105AJPH2019305375
AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
few reliable results The study relied on a pencil-and-paper test the Brief Symptom Inventory ldquoa 53-item self-report measure to assess a broad range of psychological symptomsrdquo and concluded that people in solitary confinement sometimes experienced improvements in their psychological well-being and those with mental illnesses did not deteriorate over time11(p52)
Our study builds on these investigations relying not only on psychometric instruments but also on mental and physical health and dis-ciplinary records and in-depth interview data to assess the psychological well-being of 106 ran-domly sampled incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections (WADOC) from 2017 to 2018 Triangulation of sources gives this study a robust basis for understanding the psy-chological effects of solitary confinement
METHODS WADOC is a midsized (39th highest rate
of incarceration in the United States) fully state-funded correctional system with a long history of inviting academic researchers to independently evaluate carceral practice191819
Fieldwork was conducted over 2 separate 3-week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team mem-bers (9 women and 4 men) all affiliated with the University of California Irvine In total 106 incarcerated people were inter-viewed in 2017 and 80 incarcerated people were reinterviewed in 2018 We also collected medical and disciplinary data including serious mental illness (SMI) and self-harm data
Sample and Data Collections WADOC has 5 geographically dispersed
intensive management units (IMUs) people in these all-male units have usually violated an in-prison rule and are in solitary confinement for durations ranging from months to years with highly restricted access to phones radios televisions time out of cell and visitors As a result of WADOC efforts to reform and re-duce IMU use the population in these units fluctuated with a high of more than 600 (in 2011) to a low of 286 incarcerated people (in 2015) on ldquomaximum custodyrdquo status for indeterminate terms contingent on meeting
specific benchmarks20 In 2017 when the initial sample for this research was drawn there were 363 maximum custody status people assigned to the IMU
We selected participants from a randomly ordered list in proportion to the population of each IMU accounting for 29 of the total population in each of the 5 units For recruitment and consent processes see Ap-pendix A (available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg) The interview refusal rate was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people921
The 96-question semistructured interview instrument included a range of questions used in previous studies on incarcerated peoplersquos experiences2223 covering condi-tions of daily life physical and mental health treatment and IMU programming BPRS self-report items were embedded throughout the interview we evaluated observational items immediately following each in-terview24 Interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 3 hours
Following interviews participants were given an option to consent to medical file reviews and to participate in 1-year follow-up interviews All participants consented to rein-terviews and all but 2 participants (n = 104) consented to medical file reviews Following year-1 interviews WADOC provided elec-tronic administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants (along with comparable population-level data for the prison system in 2017)
In summer 2018 the research team returned to Washington and reconsented and reinterviewed every available participant mdashnotably including those no longer housed in the IMUmdashfor a total of 80 reinterviews Because of refusals (n = 4) institutional trans-fers and parole (n = 21) and 1 death we were unable to follow-up with 26 respondents (25) This drop-out rate is low compared with similar studies2526 Follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 2 hours The condensed year-2 instrument contained ap-proximately 70 questions with variation by current housing status
For the steps taken to protect vulnerable imprisoned research participants and details of the training research team members com-pleted establishing high interrater reliability in administering the BPRS24 see Appendix A
(available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg)
Data Analysis All interviews were assigned a randomly
generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed in Microsoft Word (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details (names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software De-velopment GmbH Berlin Germany) for analysis See Appendix A for an explanation of the thematically grounded open-coding process27 We entered all BPRS paper rating sheets completed following year-1 and year-2 interviews into Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) We linked each participantrsquos BPRS rating by random identifier to extracted data from qualitative interviews medical file reviews and administrative data from WADOC
Relevant variables extracted from ad-ministrative health data included SMI a critical classification because it implies that treatment is medically necessary and there-fore is an obligation of the prison system while the person is under its care WADOC operationally defines SMI by standardized criteria combining diagnosis medication and frequency of psychiatric encounters and history of suicide attempts or other self-harm
We then imported BPRS and other administrative data into SPSS version 26 (IBM Armonk NY) to generate descriptive statistics including prevalence of clinically significant ratings on BPRS items and factors (subscales of co-occurring symptom groups) including positive symptoms (un-usual thought content hallucinations con-ceptual disorganization) negative symptoms (blunted affect emotional withdrawal motor retardation) depression-anxiety-guilt symptoms (including somatic concerns DAGS) and mania (excitability elevated mood hyperactivity distractibility)14 We ran correlational analyses (cross-tabs and t test) to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings and other independent assess-ments of well-being such as existing diagnosis of SMI
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S57
mdash
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
RESULTS See Table 1 for summary characteristics of
the all-male participant population (there are
TABLE 1 Characteristics of Sample of People in Solitary Confinement Compared With General Prison Population Washington State Department of Corrections 2017
no women in IMUs in WADOC) and the IMU Population (n = 106) General Population (n = 16 465)a
general WADOC population As in other Age y studies of solitarily confined incarcerated Mean 35 40 people6 our sample was generally younger Median 34 38 more violent (in terms of criminal history) and Range 20ndash65 18ndash94 serving longer sentences than those in the general population Latinos and gang affiliates are both overrepresented in our IMU sample likely because of the salience of conflicts among rival Latino factions as an institutional security concern2 Although our IMU par-ticipants differed from the general prison population there were no significant differences in either demographic variables or criminal history characteristics between our random
Raceethnicity (no)
White
African American
Latino
Other
IMU length of stay
Mean
Median
Range
42 (44)
12 (12)
23 (24)
23 (24)
145 mo
6 mo
lt 1 wkndash151 mo
59 (9746)
18 (2935)
14 (2276)
9 (1508)
sample and the overall IMU population Current offense category (no)
except that our participant pool was slightly Murder and manslaughter 17 (18) 16 (2623)
older than the overall IMU population Sex offenses 12 (13) 19 (3195)
Robbery and assault 57 (60) 34 (5608)
Property offenses 8 (9) 18 (2933) Range and Prevalence of Drugs or other 6 (6) 13 (2106)
Psychological Symptoms Identified Prison convictionsb
Our initial sample of 106 participants had a Mean 5 4 mean BPRS rating of 37 and a median rating Median 4 3 of 33 (possible range from 24 to 168) sug- Range 1ndash18 1ndash27 gesting mild psychiatric symptoms among the study population at the time of our inter-views14 However analysis of individual scale items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms (Table 2) Further analysis of BPRS factors as opposed to individual items provided
Prison length of stay mo
Mean
Median
Range
Ever in prison gangc (no)
Yes
No
Missing
103
72
3ndash456
60 (64)
36 (38)
4 (4)
97
45
2ndash600
32 (5410)
68 (11 659)
additional evidence of clinically significant Serious mental illnessd (no) 19 (16) 9 (1589)
psychiatric distress in as much as half of the Self-harm attempte (no) 18 (17) Not available population sampled (ie DAGS factor Suicide attempte (no) 22 (22) Not available Table 2)
Administrative data support the finding Note IMU = intensive management unit
of long-term psychological distress Among aGeneral population data excludes 761 categories returned to prison for techn
nonsentenced and 718 resentencical violations of conditions on un
ed incarcerated people Both derlying drug or sex offenses
our respondents 19 had SMI designations a politically selective and narrow set of offenses that would distort the general population primary
22 had a documented suicide attempt and offense profile
18 had documentation of other self-harm bNumber of convictions to prison excluding out-of-state convictions often significant for IMU residents
all at some point during their incarceration cGang status was self-reported Figure is calculated from 102 respondents
ided for 85 respondents figure i
who disclosed this information
either before or during their time in the IMU dSerious mental illness data were prov s calculated from this sample
(Table 1) Moreover respondents with SMI eSelf-harm and suicide data were provided for 94 respondents figure is calculated from this sample
designations were much more likely to re-port positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms Qualitative interview data revealed and will be considered exhaustively in sub-than non-SMI respondents (Table 3) These symptoms not otherwise captured by the sequent analyses) Two classes of symptoms
ndentsfindings support the validity of the BPRS BPRS and medical files (Such data will be were reported by a majority of respoassessments used illustratively here for reasons of space descriptions of the severity of the emotional
S58 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
mdash
ndash
mdash
ndash
TABLE 2 Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Symptom and Factor Prevalence Washington State Department of Corrections 2017 2018
IMU 2017 (n = 106) (No) IMU 2018 (n = 28) (No) Non-IMU 2018 (n = 52) (No)
Symptomsa
Depression 2450 (26)
Anxiety 2450 (26)
Somatic concern 1510 (16)
Guilt 1790 (19)
Hostility 1130 (12)
Hallucinations 940 (10)
Excitement 1040 (11)
2500 (7) 1538 (8)
3214 (9) 2885 (15)
2143 (6) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 1731 (9)
1429 (4) 1154 (6)
1429 (4) 769 (4)
Factorsb
Positive 1600 (17) 1786 (5) 1154 (6) stitution taking over their identity
Negative 470 (5) 0 (0) 192 (1) Irsquove been in the hole so long that it defines the DAGS 4910 (52) 5357 (15) 3654 (19) person If yoursquove been in the box for so long you Mania 1700 (18) 1481 (4) 1731 (9) canrsquot play well with others Wersquore so confined
Note DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization IMU = intensive management unit in that box Itrsquos like a safety blanket (Eli)
mania = elevated memotional withdrawal and motor retarand conceptual disorganization aOnly clinically significant symptoms (raof the sample are presented
ood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement dation positive = hallucinations unu
ting of 4 or higher) that were repor
negative = blunted affect sual thought content
ted by 10 or more
Another respondent echoed a frequent complaint about the lack of mirrors con-tributing to the loss of identity
bFactors combine 3
toll of being in the cumulatively the times) and feeling
or 4 different symptoms that are
IMU (80 of respondents topic was mentioned 359 s of social isolation (73
commonly associated
And this quotatiisolation
Yoursquore not around
with one another14
on exemplifies social
people Irsquom around
This IMU has mirrors in the cell The majority of them do not And it gets really stressful when you canrsquot even see your own reflection I mean when you canrsquot even look at yourself you lose some of your self-identity (Eric)
of respondents cmentioned 192 ticerpt exemplifies descriptions
I bet you couldnrsquot the stuff you got tpain Therersquos a lo[and] Irsquove been doadapt to their surrthis life I donrsquot [tpseudonym as wi
TABLE 3 SerioPrevalence Was
Positive
Negative
DAGS
umulatively the t
the ldquoemotional t
walk in my shoes beo endure behind these walls of t you got to go through ing this for 11 years oundings but to get hink] you can (Michth all subsequent qu
us Mental Illness Shington State De
SMI (n
opic was mes) This interview ex-
ollrdquo
cause all
people used to ael a otations)
tatus and 20partment of
= 16) (No
50 (8)
630 (1)
5630 (9)
somebody right noand shackles on like dehumanizing No human being I feel land it does have an while yoursquore sitting
Two additional alent as other clinicitems like anxiety hypersensitivity (16
17 Brief Psychiatric
)
w with handcuffs Irsquom an animal Itrsquos human contact As [a] ike wersquore meant to socialize effect on your mentality in the cell (Chase)
symptoms were as prev-ally significant BPRS references to sensory of respondents
Rating Scale Factor Corrections 2017 2018
Non-SMI (n = 69) (No
1014 (7)
440 (3)
4780 (33)
Comparing Symptoms in and out of Solitary Confinement (2018)
Of the 80 respondents reinterviewed in the second year of this study 28 were in IMU custody and 52 were in the general prison population These 2 subpopulations provide important comparison groups between IMU residents and people in the general popula-tion because all initially entered the study through a random sample of IMU residents These subpopulations also provide a longi-tudinal view of how incarcerated people experience IMU conditions over 1 year and how they recover from these conditions ) as they re-enter the general population In Table 2 we compare cumulatively by sub-population symptom and factor scores in 2017 for IMU residents to 2018 scores for
Mania
Populationa
Note DAGS = deprehyperactivity and excitement negative positive = hallucinatmental illness aMental health data
ssion anxiety guilt
1875 (3)
1880 (16)
= blunted affeht content anions unusual thoug
were available only for 85 of 10
and somatization mania = elevated mct emotional withdrawd conceptual disorgan
13 (9)
8120 (69)
ood distractibility motor al and motor retardation ization SMI = serious
6 sampled incarcerated people
IMU respondents and respondents not in the IMU For respondents still in the IMU in 2018 all clinically significant symptoms that were prevalent among at least 10 of the pop-ulation were at least as prevalent in 2018 and 2 clinically significant factor scores were more prevalent (positive DAGS) For respondents
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S59
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Respondents discussed hy-persensitivity to sounds smells ldquo[and ] tiny thingsrdquo (Giovanni) In particular the sounds of doors opening and closing aggravated many respondents
All you got to do is hold it I mean you donrsquot got to slam it Itrsquos like [correctional officers] showing their power That ainrsquot cool You wouldnrsquot do that in your house would you (Tyler)
Respondents also talked about the in-
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
not in the IMU in 2018 the prevalence of clinically significant symptoms varied from more prevalent than in the 2017 sample (eg anxiety) to less prevalent (eg somatic con-cerns and guilt) and factor scores were either lower (ie positive negative DAGS) or similar (for mania) for respondents not in the IMU in 2018 Despite having an excep-tionally large sample size for a study of a solitary confinement population our study was not powered to establish statistically significant dif-ferences between the 2017 and 2018 data sets
DISCUSSION In this study we combined qualitative
interview data with structured quantitative measures of psychological and psychiatric outcomes in solitary confinement among 106 randomly sampled incarcerated people in Washington State documenting both a wide range and high prevalence of symptoms of psychological distress We highlight 4 major implications of this
First while the overall BPRS ratings we analyzed indicated limited psychological distress as documented in earlier studies1112
a closer examination of specific items and factors revealed that as many as half of re-spondents had at least 1 clinically significant symptom within the BPRS anxietyndashdepression factor Because other studies using the BPRS in solitary confinement settings employed earlier 18-item versions of the scale15 used the scale in combination with other scales11 or analyzed only total ratings12 our findings are not directly comparable with those in other BPRS studies However our findings are consistent with other studies including findings that 20 or more of Washington incarcerated people in solitary exhibited a ldquomarked or severe degree of distressrdquo15(p774) and that more than half of California incarcerated people in soli-tary reported ldquosymptoms of psychological distressrdquo28(p133) Our findings therefore high-light the importance of analyzing specific components of BPRS scores and not only aggregates which mask variation in both prevalence and severity of specific symptoms
Second administrative data confirmed that our participants had relatively high rates of documented mental health problems including rates of SMI and self-harming behavior (Table 1) SMI rates typically
estimated at 10 to 15 of prison pop-ulations829 are measured at 9 in Wash-ingtonrsquos general prison population but 20 in our IMU sample Likewise our qualitative data confirmed that people in solitary con-finement experience symptoms specific to those conditions not captured in standard psychiatric assessment instruments30 Both findings suggest an affirmative answer to the question of whether solitary confinement is associated with more and worse psycho-pathology than general population confine-ment As longitudinal case studies have illustrated930 disproportionate representa-tion of incarcerated people with psychopa-thology in solitary confinement reflects the interaction of clinical and security factors in prison custody decisions solitary confine-ment responds to behavior expressing psy-chopathology often undiagnosed and also aggravates the propensity of some incarcer-ated people to break down or act out31 For these reasons the causal role of solitary confinement is not established by aggre-gate comparisons of IMU and non-IMU populations
Third the comparisons we were able to make across multiple sources of data allowed us to identify a broader range of symptoms of distress than studies that have focused on only 1 or 2 sources of data such as administrative data8 psychiatric assessments11 or qualitative interviews2830 Symptoms such as anxiety and depression were especially prevalent in this population along with symptoms os-tensibly specific to solitary confinement such as sensory hypersensitivity and a perceived loss of identity (as found in other studies exploring solitary-specific symptoms7915283032)
Finally consistent with previous studies1112
we found that the prevalence of psychiatric distress did not significantly increase over time for incarcerated people that either stay or are released from the IMU 1 year later Yet our qualitative data suggest that the BPRS may not be capturing actual psychopathology as re-spondents pointed to psychiatric distressmdashin profoundly existential terms as in the pre-viously mentioned quotations regarding selfhood and identitymdashbeyond the 2-week time period evaluated by the BPRS and outside the scope of the instrument More-over although symptoms were not cumula-tively found to worsen they did persist at high rates for incarcerated people in and out of the
IMU in 1-year follow-up assessments These latter findings are also consistent with other studies underscoring the need for additional research comparing incarcerated peoplersquos ex-periences across different contexts and over time17152832
Limitations Five specific limitations are especially
notable First although our initial sample was relatively large for a solitary confinement population our 1-year follow-up group especially the number of respondents remaining in solitary confinement in the second year was relatively small limiting our ability to establish statistically significant findings about change over time and across contexts from BPRS data Second as our interview results revealed the BPRS does not capture the full spectrum of psychiatric distress incarcerated people experience in solitary confinement Third assessments of psycho-logical well-being would ideally occur at multiple times beyond the 2 we were able to conduct within the constraints of this mul-timethod study Fourth Washington State is not representative of most state prison systems in terms of the prevalence of people with mental illnesses in solitary confinement as WADOC has undertaken reforms in both treatment of mental illness and imposition of solitary confinement over the past 20 years including reforms designed to divert people with serious mental illness to specialized treatment units33 Moreover these reforms have radically improved systematic mental health record-keeping we would expect not only a lower prevalence of psychiatric symp-toms and less deterioration in WADOC in IMUs but also a higher rate of documentation of those symptoms that are present Finally although people in solitary confinement may exhibit distinctive or disproportionately severe psychopathology causal inference regarding the relationship between solitary confinement and psychopathology is beyond the analysis we are able to perform here
Conclusions and Implications We found a wide range and high preva-
lence of symptoms of psychiatric distress in this population including BPRS symptoms associated with anxiety and depression among
S60 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
as many as half of our participants adminis-trative indicators of SMI among at least one fifth of our participants and condition-specific symptoms such as feelings of extreme social isolation in well more than half of our participants Moreover these symptoms persisted in the second year for participants in and out of solitary confinement
If we study people in solitary confinement solely with instruments validated with non-incarcerated populations such as the BPRS we may fail to capture the extent of incare-cerated peoplersquos psychological distress A re-spondentrsquos rating on a given symptom may not be ldquohigh enoughrdquo symptoms may not be experienced within the instrumentrsquos desig-nated time frame or the discursive strategies incarcerated people use to articulate their suffering might not correspond with clinical language Moreover past research reveals that incarcerated people develop coping mecha-nisms for solitary1232 and these along with the fact that speaking openly about psycho-logical distress conflicts with institutional norms of self-protection in prison1230 likely contribute to a systematic underreporting of distress These are critical limitations of standardized assessments of incarcerated people whose symptoms may fluctuate sub-stantially in presence and severity during time in solitary1732 Apart from symptoms or their severity this fluctuation itself is an integral aspect of incarcerated peoplersquos psychological distress34 but a need for repeated measure-ment makes it especially difficult to capture
Our findings still point to the importance of using standardized instruments which provide a baseline for assessing and inter-preting the psychological effects of solitary confinement Nonetheless additional sources of evidencemdashinterviews clinician observa-tions staff observations medical filesmdashare crucial for capturing the range of symptoms that people in solitary exhibit and those symptomsrsquo prevalence duration and severity over time Without the benefit of mixed methods and improved instruments re-searchers and policymakers alike will con-tinue not only to lack desired data but also to not know what data we lack Increasing the transparency of both conditions of con-finement and the associated health effects is critical to both question formulation and data gathering
As 5 to 15 of the United Statesrsquo 16 million incarcerated people are held in solitary confinement for at least part of their incar-ceration56 and virtually all of those people will be released all members of society have a vested interest in limiting the induction of psychopathology suggested by findings such as those presented here At least some of the symptoms we described here including identity loss and hypersensitivity resulted directly from specific conditions of confine-ment such as the absence of mirrors and the repetitive slamming of doors To the extent that solitary is meant to make people more manageable its association with psychopa-thology calls into question its usefulness let alone its justice And to the extent that solitary confinement has any causative role in psychopathology our collective goal should be prevention
CONTRIBUTORS K Reiter served as principal investigator on this study led data collection and analysis and conceptualized and led the writing of this article J Ventura trained the study team in applying the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) consulted on data collection and analysis and participated in writing this article D Lovell consulted on study design and data collection led the analysis of administrative data and participated in writing this article D Augustine M Barragan K Chesnut P Dashtgard G Gonzalez N Pifer and J Strong participated in project design participant interviews data analysis and writing of this article K Chesnut also served as project manager and with P Dashtgard participated in administrative data and BPRS analysis T Blair consulted on data analysis and participated in writing this article
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Funding for this research was provided by the Langeloth Foundation
The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Alyssa Cisneros Emma Conner and Rosa Greenbaum contributed to study design interviewed participants and analyzed data for this project Leida Rojas Elena Amaya and Keely Blissmer helped to clean and organize data Rebecca Tublitz analyzed administrative data Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor Multiple anonymous reviewers provided detailed critical feedback that improved this piece significantly Finally the incarcerated people who shared their experiences with us made this study possible
Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
HUMAN PARTICIPANT PROTECTION This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
REFERENCES 1 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J Public Health 200595(10)1692ndash1695
2 Reiter K 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016
3 United Nations Solitary confinement should be banned in most cases UN expert says UN News Centre October 18 2011 Available at httpsnewsunorgen story201110392012-solitary-confinement-should-be-banned-most-cases-un-expert-says Accessed October 22 2019
4 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States Am J Public Health 2015105(1)18ndash26
5 Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program Yale Law School Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms Nov 2016 Available at https lawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterliman documentaimingtoreduceticpdf Accessed April 23 2019
6 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 Bureau of Justice Statistics 2015 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112 pdf Accessed April 23 2019
7 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary con-finement a systematic critique Crime Justice 201847(1) 365ndash416
8 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014104(3)442ndash447
9 Lovell D Patterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prison Crim Justice Behav 200835(8)985ndash1004
10 Morgan RD Smith P Labrecque RM et al Quantitative syntheses of the effects of administrative segregation on inmatesrsquo well-being Psychol Public Policy Law 201622(4)439ndash461
11 OrsquoKeefe ML Klebe KJ Metzner J Dvoskin J Fellner J Stucker A A longitudinal study of adminis-trative segregation J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 2013 41(1) 49ndash60
12 Walters GD Checking the math do restrictive housing and mental health need add up to psychologi-cal deterioration Crim Justice Behav 201845(9)1347ndash1362
13 Overall JE Gorham DR The brief psychiatric rating scale Psychol Rep 196210(3)799ndash812
14 Ventura J Nuechterlein KH Subotnik KL Gutkind D Gilbert EA Symptom dimensions in recent-onset schizophrenia and mania a principal components analysis of the 24-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Psychiatry Res 200097(2-3)129ndash135
15 Cloyes KG Lovell D Allen DG Rhodes LA Assessment of psychosocial impairment in super-maximum security unit sample Crim Justice Behav 200633(6)760ndash781
16 Hassan L Birmingham L Harty MA et al Prospective cohort study of mental health during imprisonment Br J Psychiatry 2011198(1)37ndash42
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S61
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
17 Senior J Birmingham L Harty MA et al Identifi-cation and management of prisoners with severe psy-chiatric illness by specialist mental health services Psychol Med 201343(7)1511ndash1520
18 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121 US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfcpus16pdf Accessed April 23 2019
19 Phipps P Gagliardi G Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and services interim report Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 Available at httpwwwwsippwagov ReportFile836Wsipp_Washingtons-Dangerous-Mentally-Ill-Offender-Law-Program-Selection-and-Services-Interim-Report_Full-Reportpdf Accessed April 23 2019
20 Neyfakh L What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate April 2015 Available at httpsslatecom news-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml Accessed April 23 2019
21 Berzofsky M Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recom-mendations US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017 Available at httpswwwbjsgov contentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf Accessed April 23 2019
22 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014
23 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism isolation and normalization in Danish prisons Punishm Soc 2017 20(1)92ndash112
24 Ventura J Lukoff D Nuechterlein KH Liberman RP Green MF Shaner A Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) expanded version (40) scales anchor points and administration manual Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 19933227ndash244
25 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples J Stud Alcohol Drugs 200970(5)751ndash761
26 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study re-tention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2016113(20)5477ndash5485
27 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
28 Haney C Mental health issues in long-term solitary and ldquosupermaxrdquo confinement Crime Delinq 200349(1) 124ndash156
29 James DJ Glaze LE Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates Washington DC Bureau of Justice Statistics 2006
30 Toch H Adams K Acting Out Maladaptation in Prisons Washington DC American Psychological Asso-ciation 2002
31 Reiter K Blair T Superlative subjects institutional futility and the limits of punishment Berkeley J Criminal Law 201823(2)162ndash193
32 Rhodes L Total Confinement Madness and Reason in a Maximum Security Prison Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004
33 Guy A Locked up and locked down segregation of inmates with mental illness 2015 Disability Rights Washington Available at httpswww disabilityrightswaorgwp-contentuploads201712 LockedUpandLockedDown_September2016pdf Accessed April 23 2019
34 Reiter K Koenig KA Extreme Punishment Compar-ative Studies in Detention Incarceration and Solitary Con-finement New York NY Palgrave MacMillan 2015
S62 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
Appendix A Additional Methods Details
Protecting Vulnerable Populations
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all
information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To recruit participants a research team member approached each
prisoner at his cell-front explained the study and invited him to interview Willing prisoners
were escorted singly to a confidential area (monitored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff)
consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research team
All identifiable data collected for this project including interview audio recordings
transcripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office or in a secure server space accessible only through multi-
factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data cleaning and linking
The University of California IRB approved this study as did the WADOC research department
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Training and Application
At the conclusion of each interview in both year one and year two interviewers
completed ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items For self-report questions interviewers asked
about the presence of symptoms in the previous two weeks per BPRS standard26 The research
team completed 16 hours of in-person structured symptom assessment training sessions with an
expert in BPRS research (co-author Ventura) prior to the year-one interviews and completed
four hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews for a total of 20 hours of
training26 Using a set of seven standardized BPRS training videos of patient interviews the
research team viewed and rated each video and discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold
Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for interrater reliability All research team
members met the minimum standard of an ICC=80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years 2017
and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment team
when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the standard
training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings
Coding Process
To develop our codebook six team members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-
line27 generating an initial list of over 500 codes These codes were further refined and
categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 10 code groups After a round of
pilot coding in which each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one re-
coding coding discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of
interest such as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months
to resolve discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were
calculated for intercoder agreement
WADOC Disclosures
The research presented here utilizes a confidential Data File from the Department of
Corrections (DOC) located within the Washington Department of Corrections The views
expressed here are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the DOC or
other Data File contributors Any errors are attributable to the author(s)
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This report represents the culmination of a four-year-long collaboration between the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) and Keramet Reiter as Principal Investigator
based at the University of California Irvine (UCI) The Langeloth Foundation funded the
research and the Washington Department of Corrections and its Office of Research along with
Tim Thrasher Mission Housing Administrator facilitated both data sharing and collection at
every step One central research question guided our work How and with what effects has Washington DOC reduced its reliance on restrictive housing
To answer this question the UCI team collected and analyzed administrative data describing
the entire DOC population at six snapshot intervals between 2002 and 2017 315 paper surveys
of prisoners and staff in Intensive Management Units (IMUs) 186 interviews (ranging between
45 minutes and three hours in length) with a random sample of prisoners on maximum custody
status in IMUs and 77 interviews (of similar durations as the prisoner interviews) with a
strategic convenience sample of staff in IMUs
In this executive summary we highlight our major findings in five key areas (1) research
practices (2) patterns in restrictive housing use in the 2000s (3) conditions in restrictive
housing (4) staff and (5) prisoner experiences And we provide a series of brief
recommendations following closely from these findings In the full report we discuss the
research protocols findings and recommendations in more detail
(1) RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Washington DOCrsquos commitment to collecting relevant data and sharing that data with
researchers is integral to its reform agenda
bull The unprecedented scope and scale of data collected and analyzed in this project
demonstrates the feasibility of sustained researcher-practitioner collaborations working towards improved prison practices
bull Over hundreds of hours on site conducting surveys and interviews (under Mission
Housing Administrator Tim Thrasherrsquos expert coordination) our research team
efficiently accomplished our target goals for data collection and felt safe throughout
4
(2) PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull DOC has implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals (1) reducing the
number of people in restrictive housing (2) reducing the length of time individuals spend
in restrictive housing and (3) mitigating the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive
housing Over the 2010s DOC has indeed made improvements in all three areas
bull The number of people on maximum custody status in IMUs across the state has
fluctuated from a low of 149 (in 2002) to a peak of 472 (in 2011) By 2014 reforms had
cut this peak population nearly in half to 283 But the population increased again by
more than 20 percent over the next three years rising back to 342 in 2017
bull While IMU populations have fluctuated mean lengths of stay in IMUs (for those at all
custody statuses) have decreased steadily since 2011 maximum custody prisoners now
spend an average of 214 days in IMUs 133 days less than in 2011
bull Although mean lengths of stay in the IMU fell significantly after 2011 an increasing proportion of people experience IMU confinement across snapshots and cumulative
time spent in the IMU increased steadily between 2002 and 2017
bull Both Hispanic prisoners and Hispanic-affiliated gang members are increasingly over-represented in the max custody-IMU population relative to their representation in the
general prison population over the 2002-2017 period
(3) CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull The IMUs function with less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than they did two decades ago as described by staff and seen in comparison with data
Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago
bull Access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of programming has increased
bull People are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons and receive regular
individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement
bull Those prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods represent
substantial management challenges (eg histories of repeated attacks on staff or of
serious mental illness) Washington DOC officials are national leaders in piloting
alternatives
5
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Staff participated eagerly and thoughtfully in interviews and repeatedly expressed
gratitude for the opportunity to both have a voice in policy evaluations and reflect on the intensity of their work in the IMU
bull IMU Staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their
colleagues and with immediate supervisors nearly 90 percent of correctional officers
surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unitrdquo for instance
bull Although staff felt safe working in the IMU they overwhelmingly felt hypervigilant (often even unsafe) outside of prison suggesting that their work in the IMU had health
and social consequences outside of the IMU
bull Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them from
ldquoheadquartersrdquo they desired more opportunities for input into policymaking
especially around safety and security needs and risks
bull Staff described specific objections to reforms (1) prioritization of prisoner well-being
over staff well-being (2) violation of mandates to be fair and consistent through
individualized accommodations and treatment plans for prisoners and (3) imposition of
extra burdens on staff (especially around additional movement of prisoners into more
programs) causing stress about fulfilling obligations and anxieties about safety
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food and care and
perceived staff as responsive to requests kites and grievances
bull Prisoners consistently expressed frustration with the long waitlists for classes and
programs waitlists which extended the durations of their IMU placements
bull Prisoners appreciated the good-faith efforts being made around programming in the
IMU but found many of the programs to be repetitive futile and not tailored to their
specific challenges and needs
bull Prisoners found social contact policies (who could visit) and practical barriers (phone
access and geographic distance) in the IMU frustrating and harmful to their well-being
6
bull Prisoners in the IMU frequently experienced clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety and guilt serious mental illness and self-harming behavior IMU-
induced symptoms of social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity
skin irritations and weight fluctuations un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
and musculoskeletal pain
bull Prisoners in the IMU were often just trying to make it through but upon release back
into the general prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and
physical challenges experienced while in the IMU
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Maintain long-standing commitment to systematically collecting robust data about
DOC policy and practice and collaboratively sharing and analyzing this data with
external independent researchers
PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull Continue to carefully track all forms of restrictive housing use including number of
people confined rates of confinement average and cumulative lengths of stay and
the over-representation of Hispanic prisoners
bull Continue work to reduce overall restrictive housing populations but also the
frequency with which people experience these conditions lengths of stay in these
conditions and disparate impact of these conditions on Hispanic prisoners
bull The racial disproportionality in IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories and suggests an
area ripe for further policy attention
CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Continue work to mitigate the harms of restrictive housing including provision of
counseling healthcare group activities and programs and individualized
assessments of placement decisions
7
STAFF EXPERIENCES
bull Seek out and integrate IMU staff perspectives into reform initiatives
bull Provide regular opportunities for staff to reflect on the challenges of work in the
IMU (with supervisors counselors and researchers)
bull Develop resources to address the unique stress of being hypervigilant outside of the
IMU
PRISONER EXPERIENCES
bull Shorten wait times to participate in IMU programs
bull Leverage existing programming infrastructure (personnel classrooms) to develop
more substantively useful content for IMU prisoners
bull Continue to develop and support social contact for IMU prisoners
bull Address and mitigate the ongoing physical and mental harms associated with IMU
placements especially by reducing barriers to accessing healthcare and improving
the quality of treatment
COMMITMENT TO REFORM
bull Maintain the Mission Housing Administrator position which is focused on
implementing restrictive housing reform
bull Consider implementing similar ldquomission housingrdquo positions at the institutional level
to facilitate ongoing individualized attention to address the intersection of health
and behavioral challenges among the highest security prisoners in the most
restrictive conditions of confinement
bull Develop state-level agreements to permit transfer of seriously mentally ill prisoners
from custody-oriented facilities to healthcare-oriented facilities
8
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT
The project at the broadest level sought to understand Washington Statersquos widely touted
reduction in solitary confinement use at both the level of quantitative administrative data and
at the level of lived experience for prisoners and staff The core claim in 2013 Washington had
reduced their solitary confinement population by more than half and implemented additional
reforms to shorten terms in segregation refocus on rehabilitation reframe responses to self-
harming prisoners and systematically intervene in prison-based violence through programs like
Operation Place Safety1 We started this project with two key questions
(1) What policies has Washington State implemented to reduce its reliance on restrictive
housing
(2) What are the impacts ndash on both prisoners and staff ndash of Washington statersquos restrictive
housing reduction program
To answer these questions we
bull Analyzed 15 years of administrative data six record sets of the entire DOC population
on evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and 2017)
including subject-level demographic records (N=57130) event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments
(12 million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million)
bull Administered paper surveys to prisoners on maximum custody status living in and staff
working in IMUs totaling 225 paper surveys collected from prisoners and 90 from
custody and non-custody staff
bull Conducted in-depth qualitative interviews (1) 106 interviews with a random sample of
maximum custody prisoners housed across all five of DOCrsquos IMUs in the summer of
2017 (2) 80 one-year follow-up interviews with 2017 participants still incarcerated in
the summer of 2018 (3) 77 interviews with a strategic convenience sample of custody
and non-custody staff working in and supervising IMUs in the summer of 2017
1 See Bernie Warner Dan Pacholke and Carly Kujath Operation Place Safety First Year in Review Jun 1 2014 (Washington State Department of Corrections) available online at httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
9
bull Collected DOC policies and reports about restrictive housing reform in the 2000s
conducted dozens of informal conversations with former DOC leadership to identify
policy changes and goals and observed multiple classification committee meetings
during visits to Washington state to administer surveys and conduct interviews
During both our survey administration and qualitative interview data collection phases we
worked with the Mission Housing Administrator to bring 8-9 research staff on site over multiple
days at each IMU in the state in 2017 and then at each prison housing year-one research
participants in 2018 At each institution staff worked with each other and the Mission Housing
Administrator to figure out how to move prisoners into secure interview rooms on and off
IMUs The cooperation was phenomenal and across hundreds of hours of interviews our
research staff uniformly felt comfortable and safe This project unprecedented in
While this report reviews in great detail preliminary scope and scale relied on findings from analyses of both interviews and Washington State DOCrsquos administrative data a broader implication of this partnership commitment to
extended partnership deserves acknowledging at the transparency and vision for reform
outset What Washington leadership at headquarters
and in the Research Department facilitated with this project is unprecedented in scope and
scale in prison research in the United States In facilitating this work Washington DOC has first
extended and amplified its reputation as a sought-after partner in research-practitioner
collaborations building on the collaborations between DOC and the University of Washington
in the late 1990s and early 2000s around mental health and solitary confinement And
Washington DOC has second proven that research like this is eminently possible The critical
insights here would not have been possible to discern without the bigger picture investments in
transparency and improvement to which Washington DOC is committed While prisoners staff
and administrative data itself point the way to possible policy recommendations to improve the
operation of Washington prisons these insights are all-the-more-important for other prison
systems which provide less room for analytic insights but offer more room for improvement
METHODS
This study sought to systematically evaluate Washington DOCrsquos use of long-term isolation over
time through rigorous application of mixed methods Comprehensive research studies about
restrictive housing use over more than a few years in any given state are rare and analyses
incorporating qualitative interviews with prisoners and staff are rarer still Only a few studies
exist of specific ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities one of these conducted in the Washington DOC was
10
completed more than 10 years ago2 A few additional studies have sought to analyze statistics
about durations of confinement racial impacts of isolation violence in isolation and recidivism
rates post-release from isolation in several different states3 This study then breaks new
ground for researchers and policymakers alike For this reason we share here a detailed
description of our methods in hopes that this research will serve as a model for both future
studies and ongoing researcher-practitioner collaborations
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION
At the center of our quantitative data analysis is a longitudinal administrative record set of the
entire DOC population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011
2014 and 2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12
million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) The scale and scope of
this data permitted our research team to independently develop measures of critical
independent variables like criminal history as well as of key dependent variables of interest
like rates of restrictive housing use Specifically this data set included the entire prison
conviction history for all 57000 prisoners in subject population permitting our research team
to independently identify the most serious current offense and to provide a consistent measure
of prisonersrsquo criminal histories in our analyses And this data set included not just prisoners in
some form of restrictive housing but the entire prison
population on each given snapshot date allowing us to
independently define and operationalize restrictive
housing use
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying
uniform coding procedures to compile event-level data
Quantitative Data bull 15 years 6 snapshot
intervals 2002-2017 bull 57130 subject-level records bull 24 million inter-facility
movements
2 Lorna Rhodes Total Confinement Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004) Sharon Shalev Supermax Controlling risk through solitary confinement (Portland OR Willan Publishing 2009) Keramet Reiter 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016)
3 See eg CS Briggs JL Sundt and TC Castellano ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 (2003) 1341-1376 David Lovell Kristin Cloyes David G Allen amp Lorna A Rhodes ldquoWho Lives in Supermaximum Custody A Washington State Studyrdquo Federal Probation Vol 642 (Dec 2000) 33-38 Daniel P Mears amp William D Bales ldquoSupermax Incarceration and Recidivismrdquo Criminology Vol 474 (2009) 1131-65 Keramet Reiter ldquoParole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007rdquo Punishment amp Society Vol 145 530-63 (Dec 2012)
11
into a subject-level dataset We computed the housing location and custody status of every
prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at each location and
subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as infractions
Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and plausible counts
and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all prisoners in six
snapshot cohorts We also used inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-tests) to test for
differences across cohorts and groups
We measured restrictive housing use by examining the intersection of custody status and
location identifying all prisoners assigned to maximum custody status (the highest level of
custody classification in DOC) all prisoners housed in Intensive Management Units (the most
secure housing units in DOC) and focusing in particular on individuals at the intersection of
this status and location Appendix A includes a matrix detailing more specifically how we
operationalized and measured restrictive housing use in DOC In a meeting with Research
Department Staff on December 7 2020 we confirmed this operationalization was consistent
with how DOC research staff are measuring restrictive housing use in DOC currently
Our operationalization of restrictive housing potentially undercounts one category of individual
in restrictive housing those who are neither assigned a maximum custody status nor housed in
an IMU but are nonetheless in some form of segregation (likely administrative or disciplinary)
Our analysis of prisonersrsquo confinement status used movement records to distinguish periods in
IMU from time spent either in other specialized facilities or in the general prison population
(ldquogeneral populationrdquo) but excluded within facility movements from one bed or cell to another
(likely 50 million in number for our subjects) A prisoner placed in segregation prior to transfer
to an IMU or assignment of maximum custody status would not be captured in our counts
Since 2015 the Research Department has had a flag in OMNI for ldquoad seg statusrdquo which allows
them to better capture this population that we do not observe this flag was not present in the
data obtained from DOC and no such flag exists for the pre-2015 data we analyze
In order to better account for the variation in both restrictive housing capacity and
characteristics over the entire fifteen years of our data set we worked closely with Kevin
Walker and Tim Thrasher to identify both (1) IMU capacity and (2) restrictive housing capacity
within non-IMU facilities over the entire 15-year-period of our study Appendix B includes a
table with our estimates of these capacities
We also systematically collected and categorized restrictive-housing oriented policy reforms
and reports between 2011 and 2017 peak periods of reform and focus of this study
12
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
Survey Data bull 225 prisoner surveys
(response rate 62) bull 90 staff surveys
(response rate na)
Prisoner surveys included 36 numbered questions Each contained a combination of yesno
ordinal bubble options and short answer sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to
explain or elaborate on their answers Topics included experiences in IMUs conditions of
confinement health and well-being and demographic background many questions were
drawn from existing studies on prisons and prisoner
experiences4 In all there were 89 substantive items on the
survey (excluding demographic questions) coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU)
ordinal (eg daily weekly monthly describing frequency of
interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) variables
Staff surveys included 70 numbered questions Most questions were yesno or multiple choice
but there were also some open-ended probing questions Topics included corrections
employment history job responsibilities experience working in the IMU beliefs regarding
restrictive housing attitudes towards coworkers and supervisors opinions regarding restrictive
housing reforms feelings of safety health and well-being and demographic information Many
questions were drawn from existing studies with correctional staff5
Between February and April 2017 PI Reiter and Project Manager Chesnut conducted two
separate trips to collect survey data from prisoners and staff across all five of the IMUs in DOC
Surveys were piloted at MCC in February 2017 to allow for slight revisions of any confusing text
in the instrument Surveys were distributed to prisoners and staff in IMUs at the remaining four
facilities (CBCC SCCC WCC and WSP) at the end of March and beginning of April 2017 At each
site Reiter and Chesnut first spoke individually to each maximum custody status IMU prisoner
at cell-front accompanied by Mission Housing Administrator Thrasher We explained survey
participation was optional and that all data would be anonymized and answered any questions
about the research project For security reasons only paper-and-pen surveys were offered to
4 For studies from which relevant questions were drawn see Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates (Santa Monica CA The Rand Corporation 1982 Report No N-1635-NIJ) Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014) Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J ldquoTheoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation and normalization in Danish prisonsrdquo Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
5 See eg J Sundt ldquoThe Effect of Administrative Segregation on Prison Order and Organizational Culturerdquo in Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and Future Directions NCJ 250323 (Washington DC US Department of Justice National Institute of Justice 2016)
13
the maximum custody prisoner population surveys were distributed first thing in the morning
and collected a few hours later by Reiter and Chesnut We also provided stamped self-
addressed envelopes upon request for those participants who wanted additional time In total
we distributed surveys to all 363 prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU in spring of
2017 prisoners returned 225 surveys for a response rate of 62
Following survey distribution to the prisoners we held an informal question-and-answer
session with custody staff on the unit to introduce ourselves and the research project Staff
like prisoners were informed that the survey was optional anonymized and only aggregated
results would be shared with DOC We then distributed paper surveys to custody and non-
custody staff working in each IMU We encouraged staff to return the surveys to us before we
left each facility but we also provided staff with self-addressed stamped envelopes upon
request For staff we also shared digital copies of the survey through e-mail following each site
visit We also made a special effort to seek out non-custody staff working in the IMU such as
medical staff mental health workers classification counselors and program facilitators In
order to be as inclusive as possible we repeated this process again in the afternoon following
shift change and left copies of the surveys with self-addressed stamped envelopes for the
graveyard shift In all staff returned 90 surveys Calculating a response rate for this strategic
convenience sample is not possible because we sought to reach staff across all three shifts
included non-custody staff like nurses and educators who sometimes work across units and
distributed surveys in person and via e-mail
The surveys served a dual purpose in the research project First they provided a baseline
understanding of the challenges of living and working in Washington IMUs as well as of the
attitudes towards recent reforms which was critical to the research team as we developed
interview instruments and conducted interviews Second they gave the research team an
opportunity to introduce the research project to prisoners and staff laying the groundwork for
interview participation in subsequent months
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
The qualitative prisoner interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured
questions Questions included a combination of yesno options and probing open-ended
follow-ups Topics included conditions of daily life (prior to and during isolation) perceived
state of physical and mental health access to medical treatment and experiences with
required programming in the IMU Where possible included questions replicated those asked
in existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences Fourteen of the questions making up
the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) a standardized scale used to identify indicators of
serious mental illness were embedded within the interview instrument In total 40 of the
14
substantive items on the interview instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 14
embedded questions designed to establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg How much does it cost Interview Instruments to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have bull Questions about conditions you noticed any changes in your health since you health programming reforms have been in this IMU) variables Such questions demographics always included open-ended follow-up questions bull Embedded Brief Psychiatric (eg Can you describe those changes) We first used Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment the interview instrument at the smallest IMU in for prisoners Washington interviewing 15 prisoners We then
revised both the wording and ordering of questions for maximum clarity and engagement in the
remaining 91 interviews we conducted across the four other IMUs in the state
The condensed year-two instrument contained approximately 70 questions The questions
largely replicated the year-one questions ndash but excluded the questions about background
demographic and experiences over time in prison and adjusted some other questions to
address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status As part of both initial and
follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psychological assessment both
during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following (for the 10 observational
items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech) interviews For the 14 self-
report questions embedded in the interview guide interviewers asked about the presence of
symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard Importantly this means that BPRS scores
certainly undercount symptoms experienced intermittently or outside of that two-week time
window
The qualitative staff interview instrument consisted of 87 numbered semi-structured questions
As with the prisoner interview instrument these questions included a combination of yesno
questions and probing open-ended follow-up questions Topics included IMU policies job
responsibilities personal safety health relationships with coworkers and supervisors
restrictive housing reforms and demographic information
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and to develop the interview
instruments Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol
for administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment
training sessions in year one with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Ventura and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Using a set of seven standardized
BPRS training videos of patient interviews the research team viewed and rated each video and
15
discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for
interrater reliability Dr Ventura conducted an interrater reliability analysis and confirmed that
trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years
2017 and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment
team when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the
standard training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings In addition to
ensure appropriate administration of the BPRS in a prison setting Dr Ventura accompanied the
research team on the first leg of the first visit to MCC in year one Dr Ventura co-conducted
interviews with several team members and was available to clarify questions throughout the
length of the trip In sum this extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members
over the two years (9 women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral
students (9) with expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement
settings identified and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being
studied and minimized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application
of questions and assessments
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that
all information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To identify potential participants the Mission Housing Administrator
provided a list of all prisoners on maximum custody status at a given IMU a day or two prior to
the research teamrsquos visit to that IMU Chesnut then randomized that list of prisoners in order
to identify a list and order of potential research participants (with the target goal of
interviewing roughly one-third of maximum custody status prisoners in each IMU) To recruit
participants a research team member approached potential participants at cell-front
explained the study and noted whether the prisoner would be interested in participating
Willing prisoners were escorted one-by-one to a confidential area (monitored visually but not
aurally by DOC staff) consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research
team In all 106 prisoners participated in interviews 39 percent of the prisoners approached
for participation refused comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people6 Interviews
ranged in length from 45 minutes to 3 hours
6 D Lovell ldquoPatterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prisonrdquo Criminal Justice amp Behavior Vol 358 985ndash1004 (2008) M Berzofsky amp S Zimmer National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recommendations
16
Immediately following year-one interviews interviewers asked participants whether they
consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to participating in one-year
follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all but two (n = 104)
consented in writing to medical file reviews At Interviews Completed the conclusion of each prisoner interview in both bull Random sample of prisoners year year one and year two interviewers completed one 106 ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items Following bull Follow-up prisoner interviews interviews interviewers reviewed consenting year two 80 participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of bull Strategic convenience sample of diagnoses prescriptions and substance abuse staff year one 77 status DOC additionally provided electronic
administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as
comparable population-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
In year two the UCI research team attempted to re-interview all of the year-one participants
who were still incarcerated within Washington DOC In total we conducted 80 re-interviews
Only 4 participants refused re-interviews 1 died and 21 were unavailable because of
institutional transfers or being on parole This drop-out rate is low compared to similar studies7
In year two 28 participants were in the IMU and 52 were back in the general prison
population These year-two follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and two hours
During the research teamrsquos return visits to each IMU in the state in year two the team made
presentations to IMU staff about the research findings from year one including the results of
the year-one staff interviews Unlike prisoners staff were not randomly selected for interviews
during year one Rather a strategic convenience sample of custody and non-custody staff was
identified Efforts were made to interview custody staff from all three shifts non-custody staff
(medical and programming) and supervisory staff at all five facilities Staff at each facility were
informed ahead of time about scheduled interview trips and encouraged by DOC administrative
leadership to participate if they felt comfortable Once on site at each facility UCI team
(US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018) httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf
7 JH Kleschinsky LB Bosworth SE Nelson EK Walsh HJ Shaffer ldquoPersistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samplesrdquo J Stud Alcohol Drugs Vol 705751ndash761 (2009) B Western A Braga D Hureau C Sirois ldquoStudy retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach populationrdquo Proc Natl Acad Sci USA Vol 11320 5477ndash5485 (2016)
17
members directly approached staff (usually in the afternoon or on the second day of interviews
on site after the work of identifying and moving prisoners into interview rooms was underway)
to identify willing interview participants Staff were informed participation was voluntary and
would not involve incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them
adversely and that all information shared would be protected and anonymized In all 77 staff
from across all five IMUs and headquarters participated in interviews Staff included
correctional officers supervisors mental and medical health practitioners program and
educational instructors and institutional and headquarters leadership Since staff were
strategically sampled and many staff interviewed worked both in the IMU and in other units
within the prison a refusal rate cannot readily be calculated for the staff interviews Staff
interviews lasted between 30 minutes and 3 hours
All interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed
translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details
(names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti for analysis (as discussed further below) All
identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings transcripts
BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a locked
filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible only
through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data
cleaning and linking The University of California IRB approved this study as did the Washington
DOC research department
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS
To develop a codebook for analyzing these hundreds of hours of interview data six team
members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-line inductively exploring how participants
understood restrictive housing generating an initial list of over 500 codes8 These codes were
further refined and categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 9 thematic
code groups IMU Relations Use of Force Safety Health IMU Culture IMU Policy IMU
Conditions Enduring the IMU and Prison Work Issues After a round of pilot coding in which
each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one recoding coding
discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of interest such
as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months to resolve
8 K Charmaz Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis (Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006) Y Chun Tie M Birks K Francis ldquoGrounded theory research A design framework for novice researchersrdquo SAGE open medicine 7 1-8 (2019)
18
discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were calculated
for intercoder agreement
BPRS data were imported into SPSS and Stata to generate descriptive statistics including the
comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS items and factors among three groups of
prisoner interview participants year-one participants year-two participants housed in the IMU
and year-two participants housed in the general population Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos
test were performed to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing
location time raceethnicity and gang status
FINDINGS
We collected a large amount of robustly detailed data for this project and are still in the process
of analyzing and synthesizing across the administrative data surveys and interview transcripts
To date the UCI research team has published three peer-reviewed articles based on this
research two drawing primarily on the prisoner
interviews in leading public health journals the Initial Publications American Journal of Public Health and PLOS One 1 Reiter et al American Journal of
Public Health (2020) and one drawing primarily on DOC administrative 2 Strong et al PLOS One (2020) data in a leading criminology journal Justice 3 Lovell et al Justice Quarterly (2020) Quarterly All three articles are included as
appendices to this report In addition to
summarizing findings from those articles here we include as-yet unpublished findings from our
analyses of administrative data and our surveys and interviews with prisoners and staff We
present three categories of findings (1) patterns and conditions in restrictive housing use (2)
impacts on staff and (3) impacts on prisoners
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
Over the 2010s DOC implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals we focus on
analyzing here First DOC sought to reduce the number of people in restrictive housing
Second DOC sought to reduce the length of time individuals spend in restrictive housing Third
DOC sought to mitigate the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive housing Our analysis
indeed finds improvements in each of these three areas of focus though we also identify
fluctuations in the degree of improvement barriers and challenges to implementing these
improvements and additional areas that might deserve to be the focus of additional reforms
We focus in this section primarily on our analysis of administrative data the six cohorts of
snapshot data at three-year-intervals between 2002 and 2017 along with restrictive-housing
oriented policy reforms and reports we collected as part of our analysis We concentrate
19
particularly on maximum custody status in the IMU the central focus of our study However
where relevant we also present findings on other population in the IMU As we detail in our
2020 Justice Quarterly article (Appendix C) where we published some of the initial findings
presented here a range of custody statuses and housing locations are highly relevant to
understanding overall restrictive housing use For instance those on maximum custody status
outside of an IMU and those not on maximum custody status in an IMU both experience
restrictive housing conditions and also reflect the range of behavioral challenges and security
threats DOC is managing at any given time
FLUCTUATIONS IN POPULATIONS AND LENGTHS OF STAY IN IMUS
Overall the maximum custody population in IMUs in Washington state was lower in 2017 (342
prisoners) than at its peak in 2011 (472 prisoners) However over the entire period of our
quantitative data analysis there were many fluctuations in this population from a low of 149
prisoners in 2002 to another dip to 283 prisoners in 2014 Figure 1 presents the number of
prisoners in IMUs by custody status from 2002 to 2017 These numbers suggest that the widely
touted reductions in the DOC maximum custody IMU population which inspired this study
were not sustained over the course of the study Those in IMU who were not on maximum
custody statusmdashlargely those held on administrative or disciplinary segregationmdashsaw similar
variation in population over time peaking in 2008 and falling somewhat in subsequent years
Figure 1 Prisoners in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
800
700
s r 600
en 177
osi 500 337
r 260
Pf 291
o 400
r e 300
mb 144
Nu 472
200 105 338 342
283 100 228
149
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
As a proportion of the total prison population those held in IMUs peaked in 2008 when 39
percent of the prison population was housed in an IMU That proportion was substantially
20
similar in 2011 before dropping slightly in 2014 and 2017 Figure 2 presents the percentage of
the total prison population held in IMU by custody status
Figure 2 Percentage of Total Prison Population in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
3 27
20
09
14
16
09
19
10
17141
2
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n 19
07
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
Ave
rage
Day
s in
IMU
Reductions in the average length of stay (LOS) for prisoners on maximum custody status in the
IMU were more sustained than the 2014 population reductions Figure 3 presents the average
number of days in the IMU by custody status For those on maximum custody status in the IMU
on the 2017 snapshot date the average LOS in the IMU was 214 days lower than even in 2002
(average LOS 227 days) and a dramatic decrease from the 2011 peak average LOS of nearly
348 days This represents a reduction in average lengths of IMU stays of more than four months
ndash an impressive policy intervention Similarly the average LOS in IMU for those held in IMUs but
not on maximum custody status on the snapshot date (likely those on administrative or
disciplinary segregation) saw a sustained decrease across the study period from an average of
114 days in 2002 to 71 days in 2017
Figure 3 Average Length of Stay in IMU (Days) by Custody Status and Confinement Location 2002-2017
348 326
214
128117115 91
7166
306 284
227
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
21
These reductions in the average IMU LOS however is only one measure of how much time
prisoners are spending in IMUs Another measure of time-in-the-IMU is cumulative over a
prisonerrsquos entire sentence how much time Figure 4 Average Cumulative Days Spent in IMU by All Prisoners 2002-2017 will he spend in an IMU setting9 Across the
entire Washington prison population 90 cumulative time spent in an IMU has 80 increased steadily from an average of 43
Cum
ulat
ive
Day
s in
IMU
in IMU declined in recent years for the maximum custody population a greater share of the
incarcerated population experienced placement in an IMU
This analysis suggests two critical areas of focus Figure 5 Percentage of All Prisoners Spending at Least One Day in an IMU 2002-2017 IMU reform First reductions in IMU
populations and lengths of stay must be 3433tracked over time to analyze whether they are
sustained Second rates of IMU use represent
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n
another critical measure in assessing IMU
reform in addition to populations and lengths
of stay In our 2020 Justice Quarterly article we
hypothesize that IMU capacity is closely tied to
IMU use noting that IMU populations increase
with increasing bed capacity and decrease with
decreasing bed capacity this hypothesis
requires further analysis and deserves further
policy attention
24 25 28
30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
days in 2002 to almost double that at 82
days on average in 2017 (see Figure 4)
Indeed a greater proportion of people in
DOC experienced IMU confinement over
time In 2002 24 of the prison population
had spent at least one day in an IMU By
2017 over one-third (34) of the prison
population had spent time in an IMU (Figure
5) In short while the average length of stay
9 For each snapshot year cumulative length of stay in IMU is measured from the beginning of each prisonerrsquos current sentence up until the snapshot date
22
In sum the 2014 reductions in maximum custody IMU populations in Washington have not been sustained Average lengths of stay in IMU for the maximum custody population have steadily decreased since 2011 but more prisoners in Washington DOC experience IMU
confinement each year Decreasing IMU capacity and reducing lengths of stay are both key to
sustaining decreases in IMU populations
RACIAL DISPROPORTIONALITIES
While Washington DOC had some successes in reducing IMU use especially in reducing average
lengths of stay the racially disproportionate impact of the IMU has increased dramatically since
2002 The racial disproportion of the IMU actually peaked in 2014 when the IMU population
had recently declined Figure 6 presents the racialethnic makeup of the IMU maximum custody
and general prison populations In 2014 37 percent of
maximum custody IMU prisoners were Hispanic as
compared to only 12 percent of the general prison
population As the maximum custody IMU population
increased this racial disproportionality decreased
slightly in 2017 27 percent of maximum custody IMU
prisoners were Hispanic as compared to only 13 percent of the general prison population
Figure 7 presents the racialethnic disproportionality of the IMU maximum custody population
relative to the general prison population Hispanic gang members were similarly over-
represented in the maximum custody IMU population in these years (see Figure 8)
This racial disproportionality in maximum custody IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories (especially infraction rates)
and suggests an area ripe for further policy attention We look forward to conducting further
analyses of the administrative data to better understand how these various predictors of
maximum custody status IMU classifications interact over time
Between 2005 and 2017 Hispanic prisoners were 2-3 times as likely to be in the IMU as in the general prison population
23
Figure 4 Racial and Ethnic Make-Up IMU Maximum Custody and General Prison Population 2002-2017
White Non-Hispanic LatinoHispanic
70 70
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population General Population IMU-Max IMU-Max
Black Non-Hispanic Other Non-Hispanic
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
30 30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max General Population IMU-Max
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
0
10
20
24
-
Figure 5 RacialEthnic Disproportionality in the IMU Maximum Custody Population 2002-2017 D
ispro
port
iona
lity
Ratio
35
30
25
20
15
10
05
00 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
White Non-Hispanic Black Non-Hispanic OtherUnknown Hispanic
How to read this chart
Disproportionality ratios (DR) greater than one reflect disproportionate representation in the IMU Maximum Custody population relative to the general population
DR equal to one reflects equal representation in IMU Maximum Custody and general population groups
DR lower than one reflects an under representation of the racialethnic group
25
BEHAVIORAL PROFILES GANG AFFILIATION AND SERIOUS INFRACTIONS
While our analysis demonstrates that racial disproportionality steadily increased among maximum custody IMU prisoners over the study period especially relative to the general prison population overall behavioral profiles among both general population and maximum custody IMU prisoners fluctuated over the study period
First in the general population the overall proportion of prisoners identified as gang affiliated increased only slightly over the study period from 19 percent to 24 percent of all prisoners While the overall proportion of gang-affiliated prisoners in the IMU was about 3 times higher this proportion also increased only slightly over the study period from 60 percent to 67 percent of all maximum custody IMU prisoners In the general population white- and black-affiliated gang members remained relatively stable over the study period (4-5 percent of the population and 9-10 percent of the population respectively) In the maximum-custody IMU population white- and black-affiliated gang membership fluctuated somewhat across the snapshot years while Hispanic-affiliated gang membership increased substantially from 21 percent in 2002 to 32 percent in 2017 Relative to their share of general population Hispanic-affiliated gang members were consistently over-represented in the maximum-custody IMU population making up nearly 40 percent of the population in both 2008 and 2014 Figure 8 displays this fluctuating over-representation of Hispanic-affiliated gang members while Figure 9 displays the racial breakdown of gang-affiliates in the maximum custody IMU population
Figure 6 Affiliation with HispanicLatino Gangs in IMU
Maximum Custody and General Populations
Between 2002 and 2017 Hispanic-affiliated gang membership in the general prison population doubled from 4 percent to 8 percent and in the maximum custody IMU population doubled from 21 percent to a peak of 40 percent in 2014
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max
26
Figure 7 Gang Affiliation in the IMU Maximum Custody Population by Type of Gang
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Hispanic-Affiliated Black-Affiliated White-Affiliated Other Gang
Second in the general population overall annual infraction rates decreased slightly over the study period (from an average of 13 infractions per year in 2002 to an average of 11 in 2017) Figure 10 displays average annual overall infraction rates as well as counts of violent assaults and staff assaults for the maximum custody IMU and general prison populations Average numbers of violent infraction and staff assaults remained low and stable at an average of 05 violent infractions per year and 01 staff assaults per
Annual infraction rates and counts year in the general population Between 2005 and of both violent and staff
2017 infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU infractions were fairly stable over population were fairly stable However overall time in both the general prison infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU population and the maximum population were about 5-6 times higher than in the custody IMU population from 2005 general prison population Following a peak of 83 in 2002 the mean annual infraction rate for the maximum custody IMU population fluctuated between 4 and 5 infractions per year while the average number of violent infractions hovered around 3 and the average number of staff assaults hovered just under one The relative stability of serious misconduct in both the general and the maximum custody IMU populations (as compared to the instability of the IMU population over this period) raise questions about whether and how infractions are related to maximum custody IMU placements ndash questions we look forward to addressing in future analyses
27
Figure 8 In-Prison Violations IMU Maximum Cu stody and General Population 2002-2017
IMU Maximum Custody General Population
9 9
8 8
s n 7 7
oitca 6 6
rfnI f 5 5
o e ta 4 4
Rtn 3 3
uC
o
2 2
1 1
0 0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Annual Infraction Rate Annual Infraction Rate Violent Infractions (Count) Violent Infractions (Count) Staff Assaults (Count) Staff Assaults (Count)
EXISTING POLICY REFORM SUPPORTS FURTHER RESTRICTIVE HOUSING REDUCTIONS
Over the 2010s Washington DOC enacted an impressively wide range of reforms in order to achieve the reductions in IMU populations and lengths of stay described above These reforms also sought to mitigate the harshness of the conditions in IMUs or restrictive housing Table 1 below provides our summary of the reforms we learned about in conversations with DOC leadership staff and prisoners as well as through searches of policy documents archived on the DOC website These reforms included (a) institutionally-oriented reforms like altering conditions of confinement especially through providing new programming opportunities for prisoners in the IMU (b) organizational restructuring designed to facilitate delivering these new programs and (c) individually-focused reforms to support behavioral modification better mental health care and alternatives to IMU placements Dan Pacholke who was the Secretary of Corrections during the early planning stages of this project co-authored a 2015 report More
28
Than Emptying Beds which describes many of these reforms in more detail centralize decision-making implement programming in segregation and support staff10
Our interviews with prisoners and staff confirmed that these reforms were making a difference day-to-day in terms of the overall operation and individual experience of living and working in the IMUs Specifically staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
Table 1 Categories and Types of Washington DOC Restrictive Housing Reform as identified in 2017
Conditions of Confinement
Organizational Restructuring
Behavior Modification
Mental Health Preventative
Congregate Programming
Creation of a Mission Housing Administrator
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (in-cell)
Elimination of self-harm infractions
Alternative sanctions
Level System Mission-Based Housing Units
amp Teams
Individual Behavior Management
Program (IBMP)
Disruptive Hygiene Protocol
Alternative Specialized
Housing Units (TRU WRU)
Increased Elective access to
programming (GED
Redemption
Facility Risk Management
Teams
Chemical dependency class
counselors MH staff
(attending to
Operation Place Safety (2013-14)
Book Club) prisoner-staff ratios)
Nature Immersion
(Blue) Room
Indeterminate sentencing
TransitionStep-down Unit
From staff we consistently heard that there was less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than in the early 2000s Staff described how prior to recent reforms in the IMUs cell extractions were common ldquoIt was completely rocking and rollingrdquo was a phrase we heard repeatedly But by 2017 cell extractions and other violent prisoner-staff encounters were rare One staff member we interviewed mourned the change acknowledging ldquoI really enjoyed cell extractionsrdquo but he also said he knew the culture change represented an improvement in everyonersquos well-being ldquoIs it actually good for everyone to do that stuff you know what I mean No The answer is nordquo This acceptance of non-violent de-escalation as the
10 Dan Pacholke amp Sandy Mullins More Than Emptying Beds A Systems Approach to Segregation Reform (Washington DC Bureau of Justice Assistance 2015) No NCJ249858 httpsbjaojpgovsitesgfilesxyckuh186filespublicationsMorethanEmptyingBedspdf
29
status quo was especially noticeable in comparison with data Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago Prisoners also agreed that cell extractions were rare as one noted ldquoWere not doing a lot of cell-extractions here I havent seen a cell-extraction since Ive been here So compared to the California system and the Federal system ndash I was teamed [extracted
from my cell] just to give me fluidsrdquo Our pre-interview Staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
surveys confirmed these qualitative descriptions a majority of staff (just over 60 percent of respondents) reported they ldquodid not feel unsaferdquo working in the IMU and even more prisoners (75 percent of respondents) reported that they had never felt unsafe in the IMU
From prisoners we consistently heard that they had access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of other programs Although prisoners frequently expressed concerns about the quality and frequency of healthcare they received they also consistently reported that they were able to access at least some care filing and receiving responses to medical kites seeing medical staff regularly and getting adequate care for major illnesses and terminal diseases like cancer For instance in our pre-interview surveys more than 50 percent of prisoners reported seeing medical staff daily One prisonerrsquos comments were representative ldquoI do trust the mental health staff yes I just believe that they should do morerdquo But another said he appreciated the level of care in his current IMU ldquoI would say that this one addresses certain mental health issues better than others you know Theyrsquore more quick to deal with the mental health here with more one-on-onerdquo
Overall in our interviews with prisoners and staff as well as in our observations of custody classification committee meetings we saw that those prisoners remaining on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods
bull Prisoners are in the IMU for had well-documented histories of severe
specific identifiable reasons behavioral issues We interviewed prisoners who
bull Prisoners receive regular had repeatedly attacked staff prisoners who had individualized assessments regarding repeatedly harmed themselves through actions their continued IMU placement like head banging and swallowing sharp objects bull Treatment and custody staff work and prisoners who had been in the IMU so long together to develop targeted they did not want to return to the general prison interventions with the goal of population In observations in IMUs and at transitioning even the most headquarters we witnessed compassionate behaviorally challenging and risky custody and treatment staff grappling with how to individuals out of the IMU design individualized plans to address and overcome these behavioral challenges ndash from weekly check-ins with headquarters leadership to the provision of tailored incentives for exercise equipment and art supplies In particular the
30
Mission Housing Administrator is familiar with every individual in the IMU regularly assessing and documenting justifications for their placem ent institutionalizing such individual-level knowledge and attention is critical to maintenance of existing progress and continued reform
In sum prisoners are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons prisoners receive regular individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement by a classification committee and treatment and custody staff work together to develop targeted interventions with the goal of transi tioning e ven the most behavioral ly chall enging and risk y i ndividuals out of the IMU This is in stark contrast to other systems like California where hundreds of prisoners have spent years in restrictive housing with little or no evidence of unresolved or severe behavioral issues justifying their continued maintenance in highly restrictive conditions
Still administrative data suggests that Washington DOC rsquos 2014 IMU population reductions have not been sustained that an increasing proportion of people in DOC experience IMU
confinement over the study period and that Washington DOC is a leader among state this confinement has a racially correctional systems in restrictive housing disproportionate impact Moreover as we reform administrative leaders have built a detail below prisoners and staff raised a solid foundation for continued reforms ndash number of concerns with both IMU conditions including IMU population reductions and reforms decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions Nonetheless Washington DOC has laid a solid
foundation for continued reforms ndash including IMU population reductions decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions ndash with the policy changes they have implemented over the last five years especially Both individual- and institution-level reforms have enabled the successes DOC has achieved to date Indeed these reforms demonstrate that Washington is a leader among state correctional systems in seeking to understand how prisoners end up in restrictive housing for extended periods designing programs to change IMU -stay trajectories and implementing alternati ve pathways that shift patterns of restrictive housing placements across institutions
IMPACTS ON STAFF
In this section we focus on our analysis of (1) the 90 surveys we collected from staff working in IMUs and (2) the 77 interviews we conducted with sta ff working in or supervising Among the 90 staff completing sur veys 74 per cent were mal e 66 pe rcent were married 84 perce nt were white and their average age was 44 Among the 77 staff completing interviews 74 percent were male 57 percent were marrie d 84 percent were white and their average age was 42
31
Because we do not have overall demographics of staff in W ashington DOC we cannot compare the demographics of our interview participants to the overall demographics of DOC staff
We highl ight four the mes from our surveys of and interviews with staff Each theme suggests areas where DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU staff as well as areas where DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to staff well- being positive aspects of IMU staff culture negative effects of working in the IMU on staff staff desire for input into IMU policies and procedures and specific staff objections to IMU reforms
APPRECIATION FOR IMU STAFF CULTURE
IMU staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their colleagues and with immediate supervisors ndash both in the ir sur vey response s and duri ng i nterviews Nearly 90 percent of correctional officers surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unit rdquo for instance On average staff described being satisfied with their
IMU staff largely like their jobs trust jobs 75 percent said they were mostly or very
their colleagues and immediate satisfied and 64 percent said they would take the supervisors and feel safe at work same job again Likewise 75 percent reported that This satisfaction and professionalism their immediate supervisors frequently asked for can and should be leveraged in their opinions about problems (describing t he implementing IMU reforms frequency as either ldquosometimesrdquo or ldquoalwaysrdquo) And two-thirds of staff (67 percent) reported feeling safe working in the IMU
In our informal conversations and formal interviews with staff we repeatedly observed and heard staff expressing trust and appreciation for their colleagues in the IMU In some cases our presence required additional staffing on the units and many ldquoregularrdquo IMU staff noted how working with staff unfamiliar with IMU routines and relationships was disruptive in contrast to their usual trusting relationship with their ldquoregularrdquo IMU colleagues One staff member rsquos comment succinctly represents the perspectives of correctional officers who appreciate working in the highly controlled IMU environment with trusted partners
I think IMU is one of the safest places to work in the whole prison system I mean theyre locked down 23 out of 24 hours a day youre escorting them with another person theyre in restraints Yeah things can happen Sure the y can make weapons Sure they can do ndash but they can do that out there more easily To me you know what you have in an IMU and you got some ndash at least you got a partner there with you under the circumstances
32
In sum IMU staff largely like their jobs tr ust their colleagues and immediate supervisors and feel safe at work This solid foundation of satisfaction and professionalism is a significant asset to DOC leadership work ing with line staff to communicate about and implement IMU reforms
NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON STA FF OF IMU W ORK
Although staff described feeling safe in the IMU satisfaction with the work and loyalty and trust in their colleagues they also described negative effects of working in the IMU environment especially ongoing negative mental and physical health consequences Among the 90 staff completing surveys the average staff member reported their overall health was good (a rating of 3 out of 5) A significant minority of staff (one quarter) however reported their overall health was poor or fair (a rating of 1 or 2 out of 5) While their self-assessments of their overall health varied staff consistently reported high levels of stress the average staff member reported their overall stress level as moderate (a rating of 2 out of 3) and one -third of all respondents reported the ir overall stress levels as high (a rating of 3 out of 3) Staff consistently reported that these high stress levels affected their overall health 80 percent of staff reported that stress had affected their health either ldquosomerdquo or ldquoa lotrdquo (a rating of 2 or 3 out of 3) in the past year Overall staff thought DOC failed to address correctional officersrsquo physical and mental health concerns they consistently disagreed with positive statements like ldquo DOC provides adequate services to me et correctional officersrsquo physical health needs rdquo Additional investments in supporting staff well-being could be both well received and impactful
Comments on the surveys and our subsequent interviews with staff in IMUs provided context for these overall reports about high stress levels in the IMU First staff perceived having greater ndash and more unreasonable ndash obligations during a workday in the IMU than elsewhere in the prison For example one correctional officer wrote ldquoIMU staff do twice as many duties as regular staff They never get compensated for all the extra wor k and stressrdquo This sentiment of imbalanced workload across units was echoed by another custody staff respondent ldquoStaff are
consistently overworked in the IMUs They are IMU staff identified key stressors required to do a job that requires twice the work of 1 Being overworked by additional a correctional officer working e lsewhere Staff deal
responsibilities with a lot of stress but are still reprimanded for 2 Being institutionally undervalued calling in sickrdquo
and under-supported 3 Needing to be hypervigilant at Second while staff often reported trusting
work and at home collaborative relationships with their immediate supervisors they perceived institutional leadership
as unsympathetic and indifferent to the unique stressors of working (and feeling overworked) in the IMU Specifically correctional officers criticized DOC in general for not providing support
33
for staff and thereby undermining safety in the IMU As one officer said (and m any others echoed) ldquoThis place does not care about staff All they care about is making things look good and keeping the offenders happy at all costs This results in COs sa ying screw it and not caring anymore which makes things unsaferdquo
Third while staff largely reported feeling safe at work in the IMU they also reported being hypervigilant on the job and also at home off the job Correctional officers reported that they were aware of the pervasiveness of risk in their work ldquoWe all have to understand that when we take a job like this anything can happen at any time That is the risk that we all take This job is not for everybodyrdquo Nearly all (98) survey respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they ldquoalways have to keep it in mind that t rouble could happen any timerdquo while at work Moreover respondentsrsquo levels of stress and perceptions of risk were strongly correlated those respondents who reported they worked in ldquodangerous jobsrdquo and were always dealing with ldquosome sort of crisisrdquo were also more likely to report higher stress levels
Importantly staff seemed to struggle with leaving these anxieties hypervigilant states of mind and stressors at work Staff consistently described being on edge and worried about their safety outside of work As one staff member said
I definitely notice like going to hellip fairs and that kind of stuff in the summer with the family hellip Irsquom definitely looking around a lot more Even going to like banks I look around a lot more I constantly ndash my headrsquos constantly on a swivel and Irsquo m in a place I donrsquo t really know Irsquo m definitely looking ndash grocery store Irsquo m constantly looked down ndash standing in the checkout line because there rsquos a million people standing there and yoursquo re constantl y look ing around lik e oh y eah that guyrsquos done time that guy has done time Like it rsquos - you can ndash itrsquos really weird when definitely get a sense for that kind of stuff And definitely keep an eye out
Another described how this habit of ldquolooking aroundrdquo and ldquokeeping an eye outrdquo was both a source of stress and a necessity for safety ldquoMy wife gives me a hard time about it all the time Shes like lsquoDo you ever turn the dirt bag meter off rsquo hellip And it may drive her nuts but i t keeps my family saferdquo One of the most common manifestations of this hypervigilance staff described Messaging about steps WADOC
is taking to value and support was being sure to sit in corners and face out looking at staff is critical some of these doors ldquoIn a restaurant I canrsquo t sit with my back to a steps should involve addressing group of peoplerdquo And another said ldquoI wonrsquo t let people pervasive hypervigilance and its
get behind me rdquo A growing body of literature about effects on stress correctional officer health suggests this pervasive
34
hypervigilance among correctional officers has long-term traumatic effects our data suggests that working in the IMU may exacerbate these effects 11
In sum our surveys of and interviews with staff revealed specific stress ors associated with work in the IMU the pressure of additional responsibilities and feeling overworked a sense of being institutionally undervalued and under -supported and percepti ons of high risk leading to persistent hypervigilance even outside of work These specific sources of stress in turn suggest areas where DOC could intervene to mitigate stress For instance messaging about steps DOC is taking to value and support staff and about DOC awareness of the additional work pressures some reforms entail could mitigate stress improve the culture of IMUs and even facilitate acceptance of future reforms For instance to the extent reforms actually reduce risk o r violence in the IMU communicating this clearly to staff could mitigate some of the hypervigilance that makes their work and home lives stressful
STAFF DESIRE FOR P OLICY INPUT
Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them fr om ldquoheadquartersrdquo In our survey of staff most staff across all facilities (63 percent) said that they ldquooften find it difficult to agree with this Departmentrsquo s policies on important issuesrdquo Likewise in our interviews with correctional officers and serge ants (45 of our 77 staff interviews) the majority (80 percent) reported that they experienced tension and conflict around IMU policies Indeed while three -quarters of staff reported that their immediate supervisors frequently asked for their opinions two-thirds reported that higher level administrators either ldquoneverrdquo or ldquorarelyrdquo asked for the ir opini ons
However when we asked staff to elaborate on what was wrong with IMU policies and reforms they almost always focused on the process by which reforms we re introduced rathe r than on the substance of the policy They described simply being told that a policy had changed without either being asked whether they agreed with the change or understanding why the policy had changed Specifically correctional officers and sergeants complained that administrative decision-makers above them were out of touch with the r eality of cur rent operations ldquoThey just make the decision hellip but we really donrsquo t have any say or influence how those kinds of decision are made They rsquore made by administrators that havenrsquo t been unit staff
11 See Lois James amp Natalie Todak ldquoPrison employment and post-traumatic stress disorder Risk and protective factorsrdquo American Journal of Industrial Medicine Vol 619 (2018) 725-32
35
in a long long time That donrsquo t remember or they forgot where they came fromrdquo Staff interpreted their lack of opportunities for input as some combination of leadership being lazy and uncaring ldquoLik e lsquowhy are they having us do this Donrsquo t they understand that this is a bad idea you knowrsquo You know the option is either they do understand itrsquo s a bad idea and they dont care or they donrsquo t know and theyrsquo re you know canrsquo t be bothered to askrdquo
On the other hand when unit managers or other leadership staff solicited the opinions of line staff about policy implementation the staff tended to be more accepting and less critical of the policy For instance in one facility a staff member described a policy change to allow porters on third shift in restrictive housing and how the sergeant and correctional unit supervisor (CUS) consulted the correctional officers about how to implement the policy ldquoSo what they did is the sergeant and the CUS came and ta lked to the staff and said lsquoWho would you guys recommend They have to be IMS program They have to be level four And they have to infraction-freersquo Fine So we all picked as a group hellip He was super polite model inmaterdquo While the correctional staff we re not involved in the formal policy decision to install porters on third shift administrators made room for correctional officersrsquo input and involvement by allowing them to choose who that person would be By involving correctional officers in that proce ss they increased staff support for and buy-in to the policy change
Indeed our research team heard repeatedly from staff that simply having the opportunity to talk with us about their work express their opinions and reflect on their experiences was a comfort and a relief ldquolike a weight off their shouldersrdquo Staff told us this individually duri ng interviews and communicated this during our de-briefs with unit leadership at the end Staff wanted more input into policy ndashto have
of each site visit in the summer of 201 7 The a chance to air their opinions and to have
eager and thoughtful participation by staff in input into mechanisms of policy
our interviews provides yet another implementation on the ground
indication of their interest in and wi llingness to engage in conversations about policy reform In fact bringing in outside researchers to systematically seek input from staff (as DOC frequently d oes) whether in the form of surveys or interviews might be one way to increase both staff perce ptions that they have a voice in policy processes and their willingness to implement new policies
In sum survey responses interview analyses and informal conversations all suggest that the manner in which reform and policy changes are presented to sta ff matters the more the policy is explained and the more staff input is solicited in the reform process especially as to the details and mechanisms of policy implementation the more likely staff will be to support and facilitate reform implementation
36
STAFF OBJECTIONS TO I MU R EFORMS
While staff most frequently complained about the manner in which reforms were introduced and especially about their lack of input in policy implementation they also described specific objections to reforms ndash largely in terms of the impact these reforms had on their day -to-day work and their percepti ons of whether or not staff safety and well- being were being pr ioritized
First staff perceived many reforms as prioritizing prisoner well-being over staff well-being IMU staff described IMU prisoners as the ldquoworst of the worstrdquo ndash the least deserving of the undeserving And they repeatedly described any new or additional benefits to prisoners ndash whether additional commissary items more time out of cell or more programming opportunities ndash as being risky and harmful to staff In some cases staff perceived the reforms or benefits to prisoners as pushing staff into new job roles for w hich they lacked both time and training For instance one correctional officer said ldquoI mean usually we come here and we have to do our job which is you know the yard showers and all that and you know guys say they program and we donrsquo t have time to figure out what theyrsquo re programming I mean thatrsquo s not our job description rdquo And another correctional officer described feeling as if he was expected to ldquodo more with lessrdquo ldquoYou know the other big thing with the removal of staff is the addition of programs you know So it seems like the classic managerial approach of do more with less and thatrsquos you know never well received by the people that have to do the more with lessrdquo In other words staff tended to see rehabilitative -oriented reforms as both a burden and oppositional to their fundamental job role ndash to maintain safety and security
Second staff perceived reforms addressing individual prisonersrsquo special needs like ext reme mental illness as inconsistent In fact staff repeatedly described individualized treatment as dangerous ndash encouraging prisoners to exploit and manipulate the rules to their own benefit For instance one correctional officer described his objecti ons to a protocol for responding to instances of feces-smear ing in the IMU ldquoIt is a
Staff characterized reforms as inconsistent manipulation point and they figured that out risky and dangerous Avoiding publicly
Hey on a Tuesday and Thursday we donrsquo t contradicting staff and communicating have yard and showers Well I want to take a more systematically about the benefits of shower so Irsquom going to smear feces on t he reform for staff could minimize resistance wall so I can go get my shower Thatrsquo s how that works And we have to do i trdquo Other correctional officers objected to provision of things like a nerf ball for throwing or soap for carving ndash both individualized attempts to address specific behavioral problems ndash as opening the door for other prisoners to make new demands both adding to officersrsquo daily list of obligations and making security harder to maintain
37
Third staff described how reforms prioritizing prisonersrsquo needs undermined their ability to safely manage a difficult population For instance one correctional officer described his frustration with trying to enforce the rules and being undermined or chastised by supervisors who were prioritizing prisoner well- being
Lots of the time we rsquore more nervous about getting in trouble for refusing guys If you ask them (about) yard and shower and they donrsquo t answer and you ask them multiple times and raising your voice to hopefully get their reaction then turn around and you refuse them and then all of a sudden they rsquore bitching and moaning about it and then all of a sudden now theyrsquo re getting it Itrsquo s just one of those things where it gets discouraging but it rsquos ndash I can only do my job
Another correctional officer described frustration with reforms seeking to limit the imposition of infractions and sanctions within the IMU ldquoNow you try to correct an inmate rsquos actions ndash Irsquo ve seen a lot of my infractions get thrown out not even processed hellip to where wersquo re not holding the people responsible And that becomes a safety risk for us Because the inmates donrsquo t show that same respectrdquo In sum correctional officers emphasize consistency as a tool for both maintaining their own authority and minimizing manipulation by prisoners
Staff did not simply describe how and why they objected to IMU reforms They also described how they resisted these reforms undermining policy implementation by ldquo burningrdquo prisoners on out-of-cell time breaking rules adhering to the letter rather than the spirit of a policy and encouraging grievances against leadership Often correctional officers justifi ed non-compliance or undermining policies as the only way to compensate for a lack of resources such as staff shortages and time limitations during a shift When describing this kind of undermining of policies interviewees contextualized these strategie s as coping strategies necessary to mitigate resource issues staff explained that additional programming and movement required more time and careful planning over the course of a shift For example one correctional officer described how he purposefully tried to reduce movement during his shift by asking about yards and showers as early as possible He elaborated about this tactic
It often results in the pri soner fi ling a gr ievance with the i nstitution Howeve r custody staff are aware of this and encourage these kinds of grievances as they provide evidence for their argument that administration are making unrealistic demands on them with the introduction of new policies and programs in restrictive housing units
Not all IMU correctional officers were so resistant to reform however For instance another officer (a sergeant) described IMU policies as changing frequently but characterized adapting to those changes as part of his job ldquoI adapt pretty well with the change You have to around
38
here Itrsquo s changing every day Whether itrsquo s a good change or not yoursquo re going to have your personal opinion and I sometimes donrsquo t agree but again Irsquo m a person who adapts to changerdquo This same office r in fact articulately described the importance of orienting re spectfully rather than punitive ly to prisoners in the IMU
I just always treat them as I would want to be treated or how I was raised which is with communication and just being respectful Irsquoll try to give you an example Like somebody will say lsquo That guyrsquos not going to get out of his cellrsquo Irsquo m going to say lsquo Whyrsquo Hersquo s going to say lsquo Because he was arguing with me and he rsquos a threat nowrsquo I go lsquoWell why not work wi th the guy and talk to him to tr y to come up with a better resolution rsquo Rather than just no movement and pi ss him off some more because no movementrsquo s not going to teach him any different than he rsquos already doing I mean if yoursquo re swearing and cussing at me you got your arms out and your fists going at me thatrsquo s not going to h elp you by having no movement Talking it outrsquos going to help you more So Irsquo m more of a ndash I guess Irsquom a littl e more libe ral on that part
While some staff we interviewed described this kind of ldquorespectfulrdquo or ldquoliberalrdquo approach as ldquodrinking the K ool-Aidrdquo of reform arguments coming from headquarters plenty of others asserted at least acceptance of if not also support for the ldquorespectfulrdquo approach As David Lovell noted comparing interviews he conducted in the early 2000s to those he conducted as part of our team in 2017 ldquoA hell of a lot has changed I did not hear the same stories about neglect and abuserdquo 12
In sum understanding the specific objections staff raised to existing reforms is critical to minimizing resistance and encouraging successful implementation of future reforms Indeed the specific objections staff raised to reforms suggest important areas where communication between line staff and supervisors could be clarified and improved
bull The perceived contradiction between rehabilitation and saf ety could be acknowledged and addressed in communicating with staff about reforms
bull The possibilities for simultaneously improving both prisoner and staff well- being through reform could be emphasized
12 Conversation with David Lovell Feb 24 2021 notes on file with author
39
bull Supervisors and non-custody staff advocating for indiv idualized interventions need to (1) address line staff concerns with inconsistency in treatment and policy and (2) strategize to avoid undermining line staffrsquo s authority in day-to-day interactions
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS
In this section we focus on our analysis of the interviews we conducted with a random sample of 106 maximum custody status IMU prisoners in the summer of 2017 and re -interviews conducted with 80 of these participants still incarcerated in the summer of 20 18 Where relevant we also include some findings from the 225 surveys we collected from prisoners in IMUs in the spring of 2017 Our random sample of 106 prisoner interview participants had a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU and mean of 5 prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Forty -two percent of our participants were white 12 percent were African American 23 percent were Latino 23 percent were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differences between our participants and all people held in IMU s at the time of our interviews People in the general prison population at the time of our interviews however were notably different than those held in IMU as they are older less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang -affiliated and less likely to be Latino
In this section we highlight six themes from our interviews with prisoners Each suggests areas where Washington DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU prisoners as well as areas wher e DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to prisoner well-being trust access to programs social contact policies health (both physical and mental) long-term management challenges and reentry
TRUSTING STA FF TO B E RESPONSIVE
A central theme of our interviews was that prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food care and safety Prisoners consistently expressed confidence that things like kites grievances and mail would be handled and delivered in good faith They understood processes for communicating needs and concerns and expected to receive timely (if not always
satisfactory) responses to their requests and Prisoners in WADOC frequently complaints Indeed when we asked prisoners if they described experiences of basic
trusted staff from correctional officers to healthcare procedural justice they understood providers they said things like ldquoI got a lot of respect for the rules trusted processes and themrdquo and ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo and ldquothey are just doing their mostly respected staff jobrdquo While prisoners did not describe staff as friends or
advocates neither did they describe them as enemies or opponents This is surprising In many prison settings in which our team has conducted research we have witnessed and documented
40
more adversarial relationships between prisoners and staff with less trust that policies and procedures will be followed devoid of respect expressed in simple phrases like ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo
To be clear prisoners frequently complained about the answers they received to kites the quality of medical care they received and the way some staff treated them But their complaints tended to focus on procedures and policies rather than on individual instances of mistreatment This suggests a baseline of trust in process The idea that rules are transparently knowable and fairl y appl ied is often called procedural justice people who experience procedural justice are more likely to pe rceive rules and institutions as legitimate and therefore to follow those rules and comply with institutional policies13 The baseline of trust ndash and associated perception of procedural justice ndash we documented among IMU prisoners reflects an existing infrastructure and institutional culture that can facilitate further reform like sharing new information and gaining buy -in for new policies and procedures
PROGRAMS ACCESS CHALLENGES AND UNREALIZED POTENTIAL
In our visits to IMUs across Washington over two years and in our conversations with prisoners and staff we learned about a dizzying arr ay of programs available to prisoners in the IMU A2A ACT chemical dependency reading groups and in-cell course work Although prisoners were often eager to participate in these programs both in order to make their IMU time productive and in order to fulfill the requirements for release from the IMU they were frustrated with long program waitlists Prisoners described wait times of six months or more in order to get into programs or courses they were required to take before leaving the IMU They under stood that a variety of factors contributed to these long wait times including time to be transferred to the
designated programming IMU limited Prisoners experienced waiting for I MU- number of seats available for each program based programs as extra punishment and program duration WADOC could communicate more clearly with prisoners about how programming For many participants waiting to get into waitlists are organized and how waiting programs was the most frustrating aspect of affects IMU stays and good time their housing in IMU because they
experienced the wait times as an extra punishment ndash one they feared would extend their overall time in prison ndash actually making the day-to-day conditions of their confinement harder to bear First prisoners worried that they were either losing good time while waiting for programming or receiving additional
13 Tom R Tyler ldquoProcedural Justice Legitimacy and the Effective Rule of Lawrdquo Crime amp J ustice Vol 30 283-357 (2003)
41
punishments by being ldquopushed bac krdquo onto longer wait lists As time spent in the IMU can impact prisonersrsquo early release dates long progr am wai t times wer e pe rceived as an e xtra punishment essentially adding to a prison sentence This is a place where DOC could build on the foundation of trust and procedural justice described in the prior section to simply communicate more clearly with prisoners about how waitlists are constructed and whether and how they are impacting good time and release dates
Second prisoners described the time waiting for programs as not just frustrating because it amounted to more time spe nt in the IMU and sometimes eve n more time in prison but also ldquotaxing mentallyrdquo They described waiting in the IMU as ldquodead time rdquo leaving one prisoner feeling like a ldquodog in a cage rdquo and another feeling ldquoanger all the timerdquo Yet another prisoner described doing the same set of packets three different times while waiting for a spot in face -to-face class like A2A
Once prisoners were able to enroll in programs they often found the content disappointing in specific ways too r epetitious (ldquothe same content over and over againrdquo) not compatible with daily life in the IMU and structured to prior itize a pragmatic attitude over a learning mindset One prisoner described this pragmatic mindset ldquoIf they put them in the Hole ndash they rsquore going to do their Hole time they rsquore going to their little program
WADOC has built an but theyrsquore going to do what they want to do Theyrsquore impressive infrastructure to already set in their ways and nothing rsquos really going to support IMU programming but change themrdquo And another explained ldquoThey force it the content of those programs
upon you which automatically makes an individual want could be improved to be more to rebel rdquo Prisoners also noted the tensions between relevant to IMU prisoners what programs teach and the challenges participants face in the general prison population For many the e mphasis on be havioral change clashed with a prison environment that hindered application of pro-social skills and strategies As one prisoner said ldquo But letrsquos be honest this isnrsquo t ndash it didnt help you didnrsquo t change you nonerdquo Another explained that people often made -up scenarios for role-playing interactions just to complete the program rather than actually engaging with real-life experiences and events
In addition to these general critiques of IMU programs as (1) prioritizing just getting through in order to get out of the IMU and (2) not acknowledging the everyday challenges of prison life prisoners described more specific shortcoming of curricula In some cases prisoners said they had to complete too much of the curriculum alone in their cells ldquoItrsquos meant to be a program where itrsquos supposed to be done with other people where you can sit in a group and talk And they have us do it in our cells So that right there itself I mean how does that work rdquo In other cases prisoners described the programs as loosely adapted from programs designed for juveniles in fact a number of participants had experienced the same curriculum while
42
incarcerated as juveni les Prisoners repeatedly expressed a hope that the curriculum could be more tailored to the adult setting Prisoners also noted that program materials were not always translated for non-English speakers or useful for prisoners who were illiterate In these instances programming was counterproductive to the goals of reform
While participants were critical of the programming they expressed this criticism in the context of wanting to use their IMU time productively being eager for classes and learning opportunities and appreciating the good- faith efforts of DOC in providing programming opportunities Indeed DOC is in a particularly positive position having developed the infrastructure for programming in the IMU the personnel to staff this space and even the interest among prisoners to take advantage of programming Figuring out how to get more meaningful content into this existing infrastructure should be relatively easy compared to the immense work that has already been done to build the infrastructure for and interest in programming among both prisoners and staff
SOCIAL CONTACT POLICIES
In the restrictive c onditions of the IMU one set of policies was both especially troubling to prisoners and especially likely to jeopardize their well-being during and after their IMU placements policy r estrictions on whom they could be in contact with while in the IMU and practical barriers to making contact with even those people on their permitted contact lists
Specifically prisoner s frequently told us that while in the IMU they were only permitted to receive visits from immediate family members parents siblings legal spouses and chi ldren Prisoners understood DOCrsquo s definition of family as excluding unwed partners children prisoners are participating in raisin g who were not legally or biologically their own close friends and other individuals playing important roles in prisonersrsquo lives While there may be
many valid security and management reasons for Prisoners experienced barriers to limiting visitation for IMU residents the immediate -communication ndash especially restricted family-only rules in the IMU impose additional visitation possibilities and limited
layers of isolation on prisoners who have no phone access ndash as some of the
immediate family those who have a strong hardest parts of doing IMU time Both connection with extended family members (eg prisonersrsquo mental health and their re-aunts uncles cousins) and those who have entry prospects deteriorate when
family ties and social bonds fray nurtured strong bonds with friends colleagues or mentors For instance one prisoner participant
who had been in foster care described his frustration with not being able to have a visit with a critical mentor ldquoI have a mentor from the streets who works in a non-profit center for LGBTQ people Hersquo s not my immediate relative so he canrsquo t come here to visit me rdquo Even when
43
prisoners had immediate family who we re e ligible to visit geographic di stance and une xpected lockdowns thwarted visitation plans T he prisoners we interviewed repeatedly identified visitation protocols and distance as two primary factors preventing face -to-face contact with support networks during periods of isolation
Indeed practical barriers including both the location of the IMUs a nd the challenges of regularly accessing the phone in the IMU also disrupted IMU residentsrsquo abilities to maintain connections with their outside support networks While prisoners on mainline may place a phone call throughout various hours each day ndash except for during count and meals ndash telephone access in the IMU is reduced to one hour five times a week during recreational time In the IMU this recreational time varies daily and might not occur at all on certain days of the week Even when prisoners did get into the yard they complained that the phones were unreliable a line would be dead or the person on the other end of the line would not be able to hear them for instance So a prisoner wishing to speak regularly even to an immediate family member l ike a child or spouse might not be able to maintain any kind of consistent communication As one participant described
When I was in isolation last time that put tension [on my marriage] My wife and I were used to having three phone calls a day and we were al ways se nding emails back and forth and getting contact visits on a weekly basis When I got [placed in solitary confinement] little by little I noticed that there was distance growing between us hellip My marriage didnrsquo t work out after that
These rule-based and practical barriers to social contact and the resulting frayed familial and social networks have documented consequences for prisonersrsquo well-being in and out of the IMU Among the random sample of prisoners we interviewed the weaker prisonersrsquo familial attachments the more likely they were to have mental health problems Of those prisoners who reported strong familial attachments only 15 percent had a history of self-harm But of those prisoners who did not report strong familial attachments 85 percent had a history of self -harm14 Indeed our analysis suggests that maintaining social bonds is critical to surviving time in the IMU Strong social bonds both allow prisoners to embody roles as part of social webs beyond that of ldquo convictrdquo and provide material and emotional support advocacy and psychological stability A robust body of social science confirms this finding docume nting how
14 To calculate this we linked histories of self-harm from BPRS and medical records (a yesno binary variable) to interview transcripts In coding in terview transcripts we identified those participants who had described having ldquostrongrdquo family b onds and m aintaining re gular family c ommunications and w e identified those participants who described having limited or no communication with family
44
social bonds facilitate successful re-entry after prison and l ong-term criminal desistance15 In sum facilitating the maintenance of existing social bonds for prisoners in the IMU will likely mitigate the mental health impacts of the restrictive conditions and facilitate more successful re-entry into the general prison population and society
One possible way to facilitate maintenance of social bonds could be through provision of tablets i n the IMU In fact in our year -two interviews prisoners described being able to communicate with the outside world ndash especially with JPAY players they had missed in the IMU ndash as the greatest form of freedom post-IMU During our second-year interviews with prisoners no longer in the IMU several participants we re even compelled to retrieve their JPAY players to show to us The player proved critical to re -entry facilitating immediate contact with prisonersrsquo friends and family Such communication was
IMU prisoners described JPAY players especially important for those whose loved ones as critical to easing their re-entry into lived out of state or could not visit in-person And the general prison population
the JPAY technology especially facilitated Providing some access to tablets in intergenerational communication with younger the IMU could mitigate some of the family members ndash like nieces and nephews ndash who frayed social bonds prisoners are less inclined to handwrite letters or talk on the describe experiencing there phone Former IMU prisoners described writing electronic messages sharing and saving photos and engaging in video calls By providing access to the outside world JPAY players gave prisoners an opportunity to reflect on process and express their experiences to those they cared about most As one participant explained ldquo Like itrsquos easier to text than write than actually ndash lsquo cause yoursquo re able to take a moment reflect on what you want to say than when yoursquore having a conversation So itrsquo s a lot easier It also builds relationshipsrdquo JPAY players were also a source of entertainment for prisoners in (re)constructing their daily routines Being able to listen to music or play games on their devices
15 Cochran JC ldquoBreaches in the wall Imprisonment social support and recidivismrdquo Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 512 (2014) 200-229 Cochran JC and Mears DP ldquoSocial isolation and inmate behavior A conceptual framework for theorizing prison visitation and guiding and assessing researchrdquo Journal of Criminal Justice 414 (2013) 252-261 Liu S Pickett JT and B aker T ldquoInside the black box Prison visitation the costs of offending and inmate social capitalrdquo Criminal Justice Policy Review 278 (2016) 766-790 Martinez DJ and Christian J ldquoThe familial relationships of former prisoners Examining the link between residence and informal support mechanismsrdquo Journal of Contemporary E thnography 382 (2009) 201-224 Mills A and Codd H ldquoPrisoners families and offender management Mobilizing social capitalrdquo Probation Journal 551 (2008) 9-24 Naser RL and La Vigne NG ldquoFamily support in the prisoner reentry process Expectations and realitiesrdquo Journal of Offender Rehabilitation 431 (2006) 93-106 Swanson C Lee CB Sansone FA and Tatum KM ldquoPrisonersrsquo perceptions of father-child relationships and social supportrdquo American Journal of Criminal Justice 373 (2012) 338-355 Wallace D Fahmy C Cotton L Jimmons C McKay R Stoffer S and Syed S ldquoExamining the role of familial support d uring prison and after r elease on post-incarceration mental healthrdquo International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 601 (2016) 3-20
45
helped break up the monotony as prisoners re -adjusted to general population Players also helped prisoners plan for the future whether org anizing their legal or other personal affairs
That said p risoners also described problems with JPAY players For many prisoners the costs of the players and video messaging were prohibitive (even if chea per than travel costs for in- person visits) P risoners who only took advantage of the JPAY kiosks wished for the increased communication with family and friends facilitated by an individual player JPAY expenses create inherent inequities in communication which are in turn likely to affect re -entry J PAY use is also contingent upon technological capacity For instance many participants shared stories of frustration and anxiety when they could not use their player after the prison Wi-Fi went down
In sum the communication and entertainment potentials of tablets make the devices valuable to prisoners adjusting to life outside of the IMU and might also repair social bonds otherwise frayed by IMU placements Acce ss costs and capacity however would have to be addressed in expanding the benefits of tablets to pr isoners during and post-IMU The use of JPAY players (or other tablets) during IMU placement is worth further consideration To be clear tablets are not an appropriate replacement for in- person visitation even in the IMU they simply have potential as an additional resource to further support the social contacts and bonds that mitigate the harms of restrictive housing
HEALTH
Our interviews with IMU prisoners and especially our systematic applica tion of the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale during these interviews established that time in the IMU has significant physical and mental health consequences for prisoners In two articles published in leading public health journals the American Journal of Public He alth and PLOS ONE we detail the mental and physical health consequences of IMU time we include those articles as Appendices D and E respectively and we summarize the fin dings here
First prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of psychiatr ic symptoms suicide attempts and incidents of self-harm and were more
We found high rates of serious mental health than twice as likely to have a serious problems in the IMU mental illness designation as prisoners in
bull 1 in 4 IMU prisoners had clinically significant the general prison population Our initi al symptoms of depression and anxiety sample of 106 participants had a mean bull 1 in 2 IMU prisoners had clinically significant BPRS rating of 37 and a median rati ng of psychiatric distress 33 (out of a possible range from 24 to bull IMU prisoners were 2x as likely as GP 168) suggesting mild psychiatric prisoners to have an SMI designation symptoms among the study population
46
at the time of our interviews Analysis of individual BPRS items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms Further analysis of BPRS factors (measuring 3-4 symptoms commonly associated with one another) as opposed to individual items provided additional evidence of clinically significant psychiatric distress in as much as half of the population sampled as with the depression-anxiety-guilt-somatization (DAGS) factor See Table 2 below for a summary of these findings Importantly the BPRS assesses only symptoms experienced in the last two weeks so BPRS scores may well undercount psychiatric symptoms experienced intermittently over longer periods
Administrative data support the finding of long-term psychological distress Among our respondents 19 percent had serious mental illness (SMI) designations 22 percent had a documented suicide attempt and 18 percent had documentation of other self-harm all at some point during their incarceration either before or during their time in the IMU Moreover respondents with SMI designations were more likely to report positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms than non-SMI respondents (See Table 3 in the AJPH article for more details) These findings support the validity of the BPRS assessments
Qualitative interview data revealed symptoms not otherwise captured by the BPRS and medical files Two classes of symptoms were reported by a majority of respondents toll of being in the IMU (80 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 359 times) and the psychological consequences of social isolation (73 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 192 times) Two additional symptoms were as prevalent as other clinically significant BPRS items like anxiety references to sensory hypersensitivity (16 of respondents mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Given these findings in year two follow-up interviews with prisoner participants we also included PC-PTSD-5 instrument questions to assess the prevalence and severity of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Within the month preceding the interview more than 40 percent of participants (44 of 79) indicated 3 or more symptoms of PTSD the baseline score for establishing a probable PTSD diagnosis As discussed further in the re-entry section below these symptoms of PTSD were closely linked to earlier experiences in the IMU
Second prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of physical health problems associated with their confinement in the IMU In 2017 15 percent of interview participants reported having clinically significant somatic concerns (concerns ldquoover present bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80 respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 percent reported clinically significant ratings of somatic concerns Of those who reported a clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were re-interviewed in 2018 25 percent indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic
47
concerns in 2018 Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 percent reported clinically significant somatic concerns compared to just 8 percent of those housed in the general prison population While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
Table 2 BPRS Symptom and Factor Prevalence 2017 and 2018
2017 (N=106) IMU 2018 (N=28) Non IMU 2018 (N=52) - Symptoms16 Depression 2450 2500 1538
(n=26) (n=7) (n=8) Anxiety 2450 3214 2885
(n=26) (n=9) (n=15) Somatic Concern 1510 2143 769
(n=16) (n=6) (n=4) Guilt 1790 1786 769
(n=19) (n=5) (n=4) Hostility 1130 1786 1731
(n=12) (n=5) (n=9) Hallucinations 940 1429 1154
(n=10) (n=4) (n=6) Excitement 1040 1429 769
(n=11) (n=4) (n=4) Factors17
Positive 1600 1790 1350
(n=17) (n=5) (n=7) Negative 470 360 380
(n=5) (n=1) (n=2) DAGS 4910 4290 4810
(n=52) (n=12) (n=25) Mania 1700 1430 1730
(n=18) (n=4) (n=9)
16 Only clinically significant symptoms (rating of 4 or higher) that were reported by 10 or more of the sample are presented 17 Factors combine 3-4 different symptoms commonly associated with one another Positive = hallucinations unusual thought content and conceptual disorganization Negative = blunted affect emotional withdrawal and motor retardation DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization Mania = elevated mood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement
48
concerns in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 percent confidence level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test)
Data from our 225 initial surveys collected from IMU prisoners also indicated high rates of concerns with physical health among the IMU population Of the 225 survey respondents 63 percent expressed health concerns 48 percent were taking medication 17 percent had arthritis and 8 percent had experienced a fall in solitary confinement And 82 percent replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo while in the IMU
Based on these high rates of reported concerns with physical health both among survey respondents and on the BPRS assessments of interview subjects we systematically analyzed all references to physical health concerns in the prisoner interview transcripts Through this analysis we identified three pervasive physical health concerns among IMU prisoners skin irritations weight fluctuations and musculoskeletal pain
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They understood these conditions as being directly associated with poor air and water quality irritating hygiene products and a lack of sun exposure inherent to IMU conditions of confinement Likewise participants described the interrelationship between a lack of nutritious food or adequate calories in the IMU feelings of lethargy and being too overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day and rapid weight fluctuations experienced during periods spent in the IMU Participants described their weight going down with regular and social exercise routines and going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exercise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations highlight the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU Finally participants spoke frequently about one specific chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to them in the IMU
In addition to specifying these physical health concerns participants described multiple barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU First prisoner respondents worried about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response if staff ultimately deemed
We found common patterns of physical health problems in the IMU bull Skin irritations bull Weight fluctuations bull Musculoskeletal pain
Barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU bull Fear of incurring more IMU time bull Lack of privacy bull $4 co-pay
49
their health issue to be non- emergent This fear prevented them from seeking care even when they were experiencing concern ing symptoms like heart palpitations Second prisoner respondents worried about the lack of privacy available to them if they sought or needed any form of healthcare needing to hand a medical kite to a correctional officer passing by needing to speak with a nurse at ldquocell-frontrdquo in e arshot of other s or submitting to a restrained ldquoescortrdquo to a medical treatment area The lack of privacy was a particular deterrent to seeking mental health care due to stigma around mental illness in prison and fear of b eing targeted by other prisoners as a result of their seeking mental health treatment Third prisoner respondents were dissuaded from seeking care by the $4 co-pay for a non-emergency medical appointment (for non-indigent prisoners) Because of IMU polici es capping overall prisoner spending for any need (whether healthcare food or toiletries) this $4 co-pay represented a larger proportion of their available money in the IMU than in the general population and so represented an additional barrier to seeki ng care from within the IMU Physical and mental health concerns in the IMU might be mitigated and reduced by addressing some of these barriers to IMU residents seeking and accessing care
LONG-TERM MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES IN TH E IMU
While we have focused in much of this section on common and prevalent experiences across our random sample of interview subjects a small subset of the people we interviewed had different experiences in the IMU and presented different challenges to DOC For instance we interviewed IMU pri soners who had re peatedly assaul ted staff repeatedly se riously harmed themselves or repeatedly committed serious rule violations as soon as they were released from the IMU in self-described efforts at sabotage In other words these prisoners r eflect a small group of those with ongoing or severe behavioral challenges DOC officials were actively engaged with following the behavioral trajectories of these prisoners meeting with them individually and investigating options to shorten their time in IMU This is laudable
Another population that presents serious long-Washington is well-positioned to pilot term management challenges for DOC are STG -and promote new initiatives focusing identified prisoners Among the random sample of on viable placement and programming
IMU prisoners we interviewed nearly one -third alternatives for IMU prisoners with (29 percent) had been in the IMU for at least one ongoing severe behavioral challenges year Of these more than half (55 percent) were
STG members or affiliates Of these three were awaiting out- of-state transfer due to ongoing serious STG-related activity Again these are small numbers of prisoners but they represent significant management challenges absorbing DOC time and resources and driving up key restrictive housing metrics like average lengths of stay frequency of cycling in and out of the IMU and the racial disproportionality of IMU placements (see Figures 8 and 9 above)
50
To date much solitary confinement reform nationwide has ignored such difficult cases focusing instead on the more widespread over-use of solitary confinement for prisoners who have not committed serious rule violations as with prisoners serving indefinite solitary confinement terms in California prisons due to gang status labels (prior to the Ashker reforms) or prisoners who have spent extended terms in solitary confinement for non-serious or single infractions Having successfully reduced IMU populations (albeit with some fluctuations) and lengths of IMU terms Washington is well-positioned to pilot and promote new initiatives focusing on viable placement and programming alternatives for IMU prisoners with ongoing severe behavioral challenges As Washington officials know too well no single solution is likely to address the wide range of behavioral challenges among those individuals who have experienced repeated extended IMU placements
One commonality we noticed among IMU ldquolong-termersrdquo was that they often felt they had nothing (more) to lose through misbehavior whether they had histories of serious violence against themselves or others To the extent Washington officials are able to provide hope and resources to these prisoners these prisonersrsquo calculations about the desirability of violence shift For instance providing one IMU prisoner with a nerf ball to throw another with soap to carve and scheduling weekly headquarter check-ins with a third at least anecdotally reduced misbehavior and violence In future research we look forward to further analyzing both these specific cases and broader DOC efforts to address individual and group behavioral challenges
RE-ENTRY
IMU prisoners overwhelmingly looked forward to being released back into the general prison population They associated re-entering the general population with improved access to clothing food hygiene products exercise programming and medical care And transitioning back to the general population offered opportunities to feel ldquohumanrdquo again ldquoWell it allows you to have contact It allows you to be human It allows you to see what people do on a daily basis that come from the field or to work and allow me to sub-act that Allowing you to copy what is considered humanrdquo
But re-entry came with challenges and anxieties too Prisoners reported significant difficulty readjusting to regular social contact upon leaving solitary confinement Transitioning to multiple-person housing or a particularly bustling unit is challenging to navigate after having extremely limited interactions with people for months or years Something as simple as shaking hands represents a significant amount of contact for someone just released from IMU Prisoners also develop different privacy expectations while in isolation which can make re-entry feel like a ldquothousand eyes are watching yourdquo Re-adjusting to life in general population also entailed a level of choice and personal
51
responsibility not typically exercised in isolation prisoners described the challen ges of anticipating transfer to a new location figuring out the day -to-day processes of their new unit and acclimating to the work and social norms of a new group of correctional staff and fellow prisoners Transitioning back into the general population with new norms and fewer restrictions disrupted the consistent (and sometimes rigid) routines prisoners had developed to manage their time in solitary confinement
BPRS and PTSD scores confirmed ongoing Mental health symptoms experienced challenges with the mental health problems in the IMU persisted after release prisoners experienced in the IMU For along with new symptoms indicative instance in year -two interviews of PTSD Former IMU prisoners
therefore face ongoing mental health respondents not in the IMU experienced needs and challenges higher rates of clinically significant anxiety
(as scored through the BPRS) than they had in the IMU (See Table 2 above) And prisoners in our study not in the IMU in year two frequently described extreme sensitivity to any amount of noise feeling overwhelmed by the amount of movement and stimulation they experience d in the general population intrusive thoughts (like triggered memories and flashbacks) and an inability to stop experiencing symptoms of guilt and blame Each of these experiences are consistent with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) While IMU p risoners were often just trying to make it through upon release back into the ge neral prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and physical challenges first experienced in the IMU The l ack of sensor y stimulation and social interaction in the IMU seemingly promotes rumination and fixation on traumatic disturbing or distressing memories and this rumination lingers even after leaving the IMU
One prisoner respondentrsquo s description of this constellation of symptoms which make the transition from the IMU to the general prison population difficult is representa tive
When you isolate us you kind of deprive us of those sensories everyday you know Like since Irsquove been here hellip Irsquo ve noticed like loud noise makes me feel I donrsquo t like it If therersquo s too much stuff going on I find myself I get all irritated If ther ersquos a l ot of people I ge t weirded out if the rersquos too much activity going on I kind of canrsquo t be around it Itrsquo s just it paranois me I donrsquot know why Itrsquo s only happened since Irsquo ve been in here this time I think itrsquo s because Irsquo ve been isolated for as long a s I have been Things that Irsquom not used to k ind of throws me through a loop
Likewise staff described how they observed these adjustment difficulties in prisoners leaving the IMU
52
I think theyrsquore uncomfortable being out of restraints around people hellip I donrsquot think they know what to do For example I used to watch them come out of IMU and in general population housing unit theyrsquod come to me and it would be strange for them to hellip have somebody walk up and say ldquoHey man howrsquos it goingrdquo and touch them Theyrsquore not used to people touching them hellip All that noise and all those people around them and having to share a cell with somebody and have somebody so close theyrsquore not used to that Those are effects of long-term restrictive housing I think they improve but ndash I mean Irsquove watched that happen over and over again
Prisoners contemplating release from the IMU not into the general prison population but instead onto the streets experienced significant anxiety about this looming transition As one prisoner described
Most people get released to the streets get a chance to go to hellip at least get out of the hole because they donrsquot want to release people to the streets from the hole because that causes safety risks For me they donrsquot have any options hellip My DOC officer is coming to pick me up itrsquos not like I wanted it to happen but hersquoll probably put me in handcuffs until I get to the office and actually wait to release me because until Irsquom out of their custody Irsquom still a security risk18
While we know DOC sought to ensure prisoners transitioned from the IMU into general population prior to release to the streets this was not possible in every case Understanding the challenges prisoners experience upon leaving the IMU and their anxieties about release are therefore especially important to designing transition and release plans
Our analysis shows that solitary confinement produces a unique cluster of mental health symptoms ndash including but not limited to cognitive decline anxiety depression hallucinations and PTSD19 Our interviews revealed an additional layer of difficulty for prisoners reentering the
18 While we sought to interview prisoners who had paroled between our year-one and year-two interviews we were not able to make contact with any of these individuals and so cannot systematically analyze actual experiences of release-to-the streets
19 Arrigo B A amp Bullock J L (2008) The psychological effects of solitary confinements on prisoners in supermax units Reviewing what we know and recommending what should change International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 52(6) 622-640 doi 1011770306624X07309720 Grassian S (2006) Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Washington Journal of Law amp Policy 22 325ndash383 Grassian S amp Friedman N (1986) Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confinement International Journal of
53
general prison population (and mainstream society) from the IMU The more time a person spends in solitary confinement the more difficult their transition back into the general prison population Importantly our analyses of rates of IMU placement in DOC (discussed in particular in the first findings section of this report on patterns in restrictive housing use) suggest that (1) large numbers of prisoners experience IMU placements during their stay in DOC and (2) many prisoners cycle in and out of the IMU This suggests that these long -term effects of IMU placements may be common if not pervasive among DOC prisoners
In sum prisoners described and sta ff observed common challenges transitioning from the IMU back into the general prison population or back onto the streets Still those prisoners who had spent extended periods of time (years rather than months) in the IMU but who were ulti mately able to transition back into the gene ral prison populati on descr ibed significantly impr oved quality of life and well-being in their new surroundings
For instance our team interviewed one prisoner who spent a total of one year in the IM U When our team re -interviewed this prisone r i n 2018 he was at a camp at the lowest security level in the system grateful for his ldquofreedom rdquo back in communication with his family and feeling ready for his looming release date (within the year of the interview ) ldquoEverythingrsquos turned around real fast from being in the cell to just being almost like out in the world Theyre just letting you know that Im getting closer and closer to finally getting outrdquo Our team interviewed another prisoner who spent a total of two years in the IMU during which time he had no contact with his family and had engaged in repeated serious self-harm resulting in multiple surgeries When our team re -interviewed this prisoner in 2018 he was living in the general prison population with a cellmate had re -established a relationship with his young daughter While prisoners face ongoing mental
and her mother and had not engaged in self-harm health needs following IMU stays
in months many also appreciate increased family connections exhibit better behavior
In many cases prisoners pointed to a specific staff and experience overall improvements member who had gotten to know them expressed in well-being after leaving the IMU concern for their well-being and advocated for targeted interventions like family contact or transitional programs to facilitate transitioning out of the IMU Such targeted individualized treatment interventions often coordinated by Program Managers at the institution- level or the Mission Housing Administrator from
Law and P sychiatry 8(1) 49-65 Haney C amp Lynch M (1997) Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and so litary c onfinement New York Review of Law and Social Change 23 101-195
54
headquarters were critical to intervening to get some of the longer-term IMU prisoners back into the general prison population For instance one Program Manager said
I follow up with all of my offenders When they leave and go to the other institution after theyrsquove been out of here for three months Irsquoll go and visit them at their other institutions and see how theyrsquore doing Wersquove had a couple thatrsquove gone through the program twice and a lot of people are looked down on that and go lsquoOh if they didnrsquot learn the first time why is he going to learn a second timersquo Well hey it might take somebody four or five times before they get it Especially if theyrsquore between that 28 to 38 age range
Likewise the Mission Housing Administrator who follows individual maximum-custody IMU placements throughout the entire Washington DOC system noted ldquoWe have hundreds of success stories of people who have gotten out of IMUsrdquo He said he ldquoget(s) calls from moms every once in awhilerdquo thanking him for giving their sons a chance by letting them out of the IMU And he added he has ldquoa drawer full of letters from people saying thank yourdquo
Such stories stand as important reminders that even prisoners once thought to be unmanageable can improve outside of the IMU and learn to thrive in our communities even in spite of the many documented mental health challenges associated with having spent time in solitary confinement
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021
While data collection for this research project formally concluded in 2018 reform efforts within Washington DOC continued The Mission Housing Administrator continued to oversee all cases of long-term maximum custody IMU placements and to develop individualized interventions ndash from regular phone calls and exchanges of letters to facilitating more family contact ndash to assist in transitioning people out of the IMU Between 2018 and 2020 Washington DOC partnered with the Vera Institute of Justice to pursue further restrictive housing reform (and also joined a partnership with AMEND to improve overall correctional culture)20 In 2021 Vera Institute reported that overall restrictive housing use decreased by nearly ten percent between 2018
20 See PRESS RELEASE The Washington State Department of Corrections Partners with the Vera Institute to Focus on Restricted Housing Reforms May 16 2019 httpswwwdocwagovnews201905162019phtm
55
and 2020 and average and medium lengths of stay in IMU on maximum custody status decreased significantly by 18 and 33 percent respectively 21
Although the onset of COVID in early 2020 set som e of Washington DOC continues these restrictive housing reduction efforts back Washingt on to develop and implement DOC continues to implement additional reforms designed to strategies to reduce reliance
(1) further reduce reliance on restrictive housing on restrictive housing and (eliminating the sanction of disciplinary segregation improve conditions of shortening the maximum time in administrative segregation confinement in IMUs from 47 to 30 days implementing ldquoearned time creditsrdquo for
people assigned to maximum custody and piloting new hearings processes to divert ser iously mentally ill prisoners from restrictive housing ) and (2) improve conditions of confinement within restrictive housing units (increasing out- of-cell time implementing plans to t rack these increases through a program called Pipe permitting a broader range of visitors beyond immediate family and notifying emergency contacts when prisoners are placed in restrictive housing) In addition to these reforms Washington DOC has been and plans to continue ldquore -purposingrdquo IMU units for other less restrictive ldquomissionsrdquo like ldquosafe harborrdquo units for gang dropouts transition units for people moving between IMU and general population and a potential unit for people with traumatic brain injur ies As the Mission Housing Administrator said ldquowe are trying to take r estrictive housing beds away so they canrsquo t be filledrdquo 22
DOC has also been working to address IMU staff concerns DOC established a Steering Committee in 2018 including line staff m ental health professionals and correctional managers to help to develop and implement IMU -related policies By including line staff t his Committee directly addresses staff desi res documented in this repor t to be hear d and to have more input in IMU -related policy decisions In addition DOC developed a training handbook especially for IMU staff and now requires staff with IMU posts to complete a training program associated with this handbook within 6 months of beginning work in an IMU In sum DOC has
21 Rachel Friedrich ldquoWashington Corrections Continues Restrictive Housing Reformsrdquo Oct 28 2020 httpswwwdocwagovnews202010282020htm see a lso Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author)
22 See Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author) conversation with Tim Thrasher Feb 19 2021 (notes on file with author)
56
laid a strong groundwork from which to continue to implement many of the recommendations identified in the executive summary to this report
57
APPENDICES
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL
Legend 5 MaxIMU 4 OthIMU 3 Max SOUITP 2 Max Other
1 GP 0 UNK
IMU SOU CBCC OTH FIELD UNK PRISON
4 MAX 5 3 3 2 0 0
CUSTODY 3 CLO 4 1 1 1 1 1
LEVEL 2 MED 4 1 1 1 1 1
1 OTH 4 1 1 1 1 1
0 UNK 4 0 0 0 0 0
G17 Custody Population by Index Location and Custody Level
IMU SOU CBCC OTH PRISN FIELD UNK TOTALS
4 MAX 342 30 22 18 0 0 412
CUSTODY 3 CLO 77 56 400 988 32 0 1553
LEVEL 2 MED 103 74 43 3441 43 0 3704
1 OTH 69 149 16 10811 550 0 11595
0 UNK 12 0 0 470 146 51 679
TOTALS 603 309 481 15728 771 51 17943
58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020
1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020
Local RH Units AHCC
CRCC
TRU
WCCW
WSR-3a
WSR-3
WSP-4
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
0
80
101
64
0
0
40
0
80
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
0
0
40
0
0
0
Local RH Units Total
397 397 325 285 273 172 172 142
IMUs (Ad Seg Beds) CBCC-IMU
MCC-IMU
MICC-IMU
SCCC-IMU
WCC-IMU
WSP-IMU (N)
WSP-IMU (S)
CRCC IMU
124(62)
0
64(0)
0
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
100(100)
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
100(70)
IMUs Total 408 552 552 952 888 888 740 770
Sum Local RH + IMUs
805 949 877 1237 1163 1060 912 912
59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE
See next page
60
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher-Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Journal Justice Quarterly
Manuscript ID RJQY-2020-0181R2
Manuscript Type Original Article
Keywords Restrictive housing Solitary confinement Gangs Prison
The Version of Record of this manuscript has been published and is available in Justice Quarterly published online Dec 21 2020 httpsdoiorg1010800741882520201853800
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
Page 1 of 29 Justice QuarterlyTable 1 Washington DOC Population Characteristics 2002-2017
Cohort 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Age at Snapshot (in Years) 18 to 25 21 19 17 16 13 11 26 to 35 33 33 32 34 35 34 36 to 45 29 29 28 25 26 27 Over 45 17 20 23 25 27 28
Gender Female 7 8 8 8 8 8
Male 93 92 92 93 92 92 RaceEthnicity
White Non-Hispanic 60 63 62 60 61 60 Black Non-Hispanic 21 19 19 19 18 18
Hispanic 12 10 11 12 13 14 OtherUnknown 7 8 9 9 9 9
Most Serious Offense at Conviction Violent Non-Sex 41 42 44 46 46 48
Sex 17 17 20 20 20 19 Property 15 17 18 19 20 19
DrugOther 25 23 18 15 14 13 Missing 2 1 0 0 0 0
Sentence Length (in Months) Mean 879 891 948 998 1017 1009
Standard Deviation 1048 1071 1121 1173 1204 1246 Gang Affiliation by RacialEthnic STG
White 5 5 6 6 5 5 Black 9 9 9 10 10 10
Hispanic 4 5 6 8 9 9 Other 1 1 2 2 2 2
No Gang Affiliation 81 80 78 75 74 74
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17308 17288 17625 17943 Source Authorsrsquo Calculations Washington State Department of Corrections
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
For Peer ReviewOnly
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
350
Justice Quarterly Page 2 of 29
Figure 1 Percentage Change in IMU-Max Population IMU-Max Length of Stay (LOS) and Total Prison Population (Indexed at 2002) Washington DOC 2002-2017
100
150
200
250
300
Perc
enta
ge C
hang
e fr
om 2
002
50
0 2002
(=100) 2005 2008
Snapshot Year 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max Population IMU-Max LOS Total Prison Population
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
48495051525354555657585960
1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647
Page 3 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Table 2 Solitary Confinement in Washington State 2002-2017
2002 Num
Custody amp Confinement Level IMU-Max 149 09
IMU-AdDSeg 105 07 Max-Tx 18 01
Other-Max 34 02 General Population 15499 974
Out of StateUnknown 102 06
2005 Num
228 14 144 09 50 03 55 03
16270 965 105 06
Cohort 2008 2011
Num Num
338 20 472 27 337 19 177 10 44 03 35 02 11 01 27 02
16438 950 16440 951 140 08 137 08
2014 Num
283 16 291 17 42 02 20 01
16893 958 96 05
2017 Num
342 19 260 14 52 03 18 01
17121 954 150 08
Total IMU Total Maximum Custody
254 201
16 13
372 333
22 20
675 393
39 23
649 534
38 31
574 345
33 20
602 412
34 23
Cumulative Days Spent in IMU (Any Custody Status)dagger
Mean (St Dev) 431 (2115) 476 (2303) 562 (2568) 746 (3027) 804 (3271) 824 (3300)
Not placed in IMU 1-45 days
46-90 days 91-365 days
366 days or more (gt1 year) At least 1 day in IMU
12062 2128 499 728 490
3845
758 134 31 46 31 242
12673 2344 487 755 593
4179
752 139 29 45 35 248
12533 2606 583 890 695
4774
724 151 34 51 40 276
12120 2535 610
1041 981
5167
701 147 35 60 57 299
11863 2854 810
1050 1048 5762
673 162 46 60 59 327
11847 2985 928
1075 1108 6096
660 166 52 60 62 340
Days in IMU by Custody and Confinement Level Mean (St Dev)
IMU-Max IMU-AdDSeg
2270 1147
(1362) (1246)
3060 1169
(2392) (1212)
2839 906
(1929) (1169)
3477 1278
(2732) (1385)
3258 664
(3167) (779)
2140 709
(1296) (796)
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17307 17287 17625 17943
Source Authorsrsquo calculations Washington State Department of Corrections Changes in the use of local segregation for disciplinary and administrative purposes (outside of IMUs for prisoners classified lower than Max Custody) likely affect the counts of IMU-AdDSeg populations particularly in early cohort years Total IMU is the sum of all prisoners living in IMU units on July 1st including (i) IMU-Max those on maximum custody housed in IMUs and (ii) IMU-AdDSeg those who are housed in IMUs on lower custody levels including administrative segregation disciplinary segregation and awaiting hearings Total Maximum Custody consists of three groups all classified as maximum custody (i) those housed in IMUs (IMU-Max) (ii) those in SOU or ITP units (Max-Tx) and (iii) those located elsewhere (Other-Max) dagger Days spent in IMU represents cumulative days spent in IMU until the snapshot date for all prisoners regardless of custody classification during their current prison admission
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Justice Quarterly Page 4 of 29Table 3 Comparison of IMU-Max and General Prison Populations Washington DOC 2002-2017
Cohort 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2 IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen 3 Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop4
Background Characteristics 6 Age at Snapshot (Years) 7 18 to 25 36 21 24 19 31 16 24 15 19 13 20 11 8 9
26 to 35 36 to 45
40 17
33 29
40 22
32 29
43 15
32 29
45 18
34 26
41 20
34 26
47 20
34 27
11 Over 45 7 17 13 20 12 23 13 25 19 27 13 29 12 RaceEthnicity13 14
Black Non-Hispanic Hispanic
19 20
21 11
16 22
19 10
15 30
19 10
20 29
19 12
14 37
18 12
17 27
18 13
16 OtherUnknown 13 7 8 8 6 9 7 9 5 9 9 9 17 White Non-Hispanic 48 60 55 63 49 62 44 61 44 62 47 60 18 Most Serious Offense at 19 Conviction
21 22
Violent Non-Sex Sex
68 15
41 17
66 14
42 17
70 9
43 20
74 11
45 21
78 8
45 20
75 7
48 20
23 Property 8 16 10 17 14 19 11 19 10 20 11 20 24 DrugOther 9 25 9 23 7 18 4 16 4 14 7 13
Missing26 Age of First Conviction
1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 (Years)28 29 Under 18
18 to 25
12 69
4 45
9 69
3 45
10 69
3 45
10 65
3 46
8 67
3 46
8 69
3 45
31 Over 25 20 51 22 52 21 52 25 51 25 51 23 52 32 In-Prison Behavioral Profile 33 Gang Affiliation by34 RacialEthnic STG
36 37
White Black
14 22
4 9
21 14
5 9
20 12
5 9
15 14
5 10
15 11
5 10
14 16
4 10
38 Hispanic 21 4 22 4 39 5 33 7 40 8 32 8 39 Other 3 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 4 2 4 2
41 No Gang Affiliation 40 81 43 81 28 79 36 76 31 75 33 76
42 Annual Infraction Rate 43 44 Mean 83 13 51 11 53 11 42 10 47 10 49 11
St Dev 76 24 78 18 54 20 49 17 59 18 67 19 46 Violent Infractions 47 48 Mean 40 05 33 04 33 05 30 05 33 05 30 05
49 St Dev 58 15 45 14 42 15 40 16 43 16 34 16 Staff Assaults
51 52 53
Mean St Dev
12 33
01 04
07 22
00 04
07 20
00 04
07 21
01 05
08 25
01 05
06 20
01 05
54 Total Population 149 15499 228 16270 338 16438 472 16440 283 16893 342 17121
56 Source Authors calculations Washington State Department of Corrections 57 Statistically significant differences between IMU-Max and General Population (Gen Pop) at plt001 (for categorical chi square for 58 numeric t-test) 59
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Page 5 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher -Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Abstract This article presents a rare longitudinal analysis of solitary confinement use in one state prison system spanning 2002-2017 in the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) An ongoing partnership with DOC officials facilitated methodological and conceptual improvements allowing us to construct a dataset that provides a rich description of who is in solitary confinement for how long and why Operationalizing solitary confinement as the intersection of the most serious custody status with the most restrictive housing location we describe significant changes in ethnic composition and behavioral profiles of people in solitary confinement and in frequency and duration of solitary confinement use These results suggest how particular policy interventions have affected the composition numbers and lengths of stay in solitary confinement Combining longitudinal analysis and iterative engagement with DOC officials we provide a roadmap for better understanding solitary confinement use in the United States now and in the future
Tens of thousands of prisoners across the United States experience solitary confinement
annually (ASCA-Liman 2015 2018 Beck 2015) Prisoners generally spend no more than an
hour per day outside of cells the size of a wheelchair-accessible bathroom stall and eat cold
meals alone with limited access to natural light phones family visits or any human touch
Prisoners live not days but months and years under such conditions In tandem with mass
incarceration the use of solitary confinement expanded drastically across the United States in the
1980s and 1990s often in modern hyper-secure ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities (Reiter 2016 Riveland
1999 Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Though integral to incarceration since the prison was ldquobornrdquo and
perpetually controversial (Foucault 1977 Haney amp Lynch 1997 Smith 2006 Rubin amp Reiter
2018) solitary confinement has come under renewed scrutiny in the last decade (Reiter 2018
ASCA-Liman 2015) Federal and state correctional systems have begun to experiment with
mitigation and alternative programs Here we focus on a 15-year period during which the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) attempted to confront these issues and ask
whether and how a prison system might reduce its use of solitary confinement
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Justice Quarterly Page 6 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
The question of whether a prison system might change direction including how the
practice of solitary confinement might be constrained has animated criminological scholarship
over decades (eg Jacobs 1977 Liebling 1999 Petersilia 1991 Rhodes 2004 Reiter 2016
Rubin amp Reiter 2018) A longitudinal quantitative dataset with which to assess these questions
however is rare Our dataset analyzed in collaboration with practitioner partners allows us to
look both at individual faFor Peer Review Only ctors such as how many gang members with violent infraction histories
are placed in solitary confinement for how long in any given year and at institutional factors
including demographic shifts and policy changes which influence behavioral patterns (Toch
1977 Liebling 1999 Toch amp Adams 1989 Haney 2018)
Where scholars have used point-in-time datasets to examine the relationship between
individual and institutional factors in understanding the use and effects of solitary confinement
controversies abound over how to define and operationalize the practice (Kurki amp Morris 2001
Naday et al 2008 Mears et al 2019 Reiter 2016) We identify which prisoners are subjected
to the aversive conditions described above in terms of two factors 1) whether they are living in
units engineered to lock them down (location) and 2) the rules governing how long they stay
their conditions of confinement and movement (custody status) Here these measurement
principles are applied to a rich administrative dataset to ask 1 Who is in solitary confinement
for how long and why 2 How if at all do their individual characteristics including ethnicity
gang status and b ehavioral profiles change over time 3 What patterns emerge from this
analysis We show how the distribution and extent of solitary confinement use in Washington
has shifted with institutional vicissitudes in demographics capacity gang management policies
programming and classification systems
Trajectories of Solitary Confinement Placement
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Page 7 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Estimates of how many people experience solitary confinement annually range from
68000 prisoners to 18 of all prisoners in the United States or over 250000 people (ASCA-
Liman 2015 Beck 2015) To address definitional debates underlying conflicting estimates
Mears et al recently suggested a four-dimensional conceptual framework ndash goal duration
quality and intentionality ndash to describe the constellation of factors that make up solitary
confinement (or ldquorestric
o define solitary confinement a
conceptually and et
For Peer Review Only tive housingrdquo) practices (2019 1434) The operational focus of our
alternative approach allows us to bypass arguments about how t
hically controversial practice Rather our operational definition applies the
near-universal correctional functions of classification and movement to identify the sites and
subjects of solitary confinement from correctional tracking records These methods permit
consistent robust a nalyses of who is subjected to solitary confinement and the association of this
experience with institutional misconduct and other factors
Previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions about whether solitary confinement
has a disparate impact on groups defined by race or ethnicity Studies focusing on patterns in
disciplinary infractions and solitary confinement placements over four to six years tend to find
minimal disparities (Cochran et al 2018 Tasca amp Turanovic 2018) while point-in-time
comparisons of demographics of solitary confinement units with general population units
consistently find non-white prisoners over-represented in solitary confinement (Schlanger 2012
Reiter 2012) A recent study analyzed a survey that asked state prison systems to self-report
solitary confinement and gang-affiliated populations prisoners classified as gang members were
over-represented in solitary confinement across the United States (Pyrooz amp Mitchell 2019)
The study does not m ention race but others have noted the longstanding ties between race and
gangs in US prisons (Berger 2014 Bloom amp Martin 2013 Reiter 2016) strengthening Pyrooz
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 8 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and Mitchellrsquos recommendation to ldquointegrate measures of gang affiliation into correctional
researchrdquo (2019 22) as we do in our analysis
The relationship between solitary confinement and institutional order is also contested (eg
Briggs Sundt and Castellano 2003 Lovell Johnson amp Cain 2007) One recent study among
men in a three-year cohort in a mid-western DOC found that disciplinary segregation was
associated with a greater probability of misconduct (Labrecque amp Smith 2019) but another
study among men in a two-year cohort in the Oregon DOC found that disciplinary segregation
was not a significant predictor of subsequent institutional misconduct (Lucas amp Jones 2017)
Our dataset permits an evaluation of longer-term patterns of misconduct in and out of solitary
settings
One recent study expanded the usual short periods of analysis described in preceding studies
about both race and misconduct using nearly a decade (1987-96) of data from Kansas a prison
system small enough (5-7000 prisoners) to allow tracing of bed-level data to examine individual
correlates of solitary confinement placement such as race and also patterns in frequency and
duration of solitary confinement over time (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Our study takes an even
broader scale approach examining populations in and out of solitary confinement over 15 years
with 15000 or more prisoners per cohort following particular individuals and groups over
decades of criminal and correctional history
Attending to broader institutional forces at play over our study period is critical to our
approach Lynch recently argued that in studies of sentencing findings are often
ldquooperationalized as a single end-stage outcome that is unmoored from the social organizational
and institutional forces that help produce a class of defendants to be sentencedrdquo (2020 1159)
This critique could just as readily be applied to studies of solitary confinement (eg Cochran et
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Page 9 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
al 2018 Logan et al 2017) in which disparities in outcomes and differences in personal and
behavioral characteristics of prisoners are analyzed with limited attention to institutional patterns
such as fluctuations in bed capacity shifts in demographic make-up and reforms or
retrenchments in policies governing solitary confinement placement and release Our
longitudinal dataset allows us to generate individual-level and aggregate statistics on histories
and outcomes during incarceration and to place findings in the context of broader institutional
forces shaping those patterns
The administrative dataset analyzed here was collected as part of a multi-method project also
using ethnographic interview and archival data to evaluate solitary confinement use over time
in Washington (DOC) (Reiter et al 2020) This project extends a decades-long collaborative
relationship between researchers and DOC first between the University of Washington (UW)
and DOC through the Mental Health Collaboration (Allen et al 2001) later in a UW-led multi-
method systematic survey of Washingtonrsquos solitary confinement population in 1999-2000
(Lovell et al 2000 Rhodes 2004 Lovell 2008) and finally in this study replicating and
extending the 2000 study in collaboration with an original member of both previous studies
In rates of overall incarceration and solitary confinement use Washington DOC is below
average it has the 12th lowest rate of incarceration among the states (Kaeble amp Cowhig 2018)
and as of 2018 its reported proportion of population in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo (23) was half the
national average (45) (ASCA-Liman 2018 13)1 In terms of willingness to collaborate with
researchers however Washington DOC is above average current and former DOC leadership
have agreed there are knowledge gaps around solitary confinement invited scholars and
advocates alike to analyze and critique policies in order to address these gaps and participated
actively in collaborations both facilitating access to the administrative data underlying the
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Justice Quarterly Page 10 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
analyses presented here and helping to interpret results In particular Eldon Vail and Dan
Pacholke nationally recognized correctional policy experts led Washington DOC during part of
our study period and consulted with us on interpretation of findings
Research about solitary confinement use has been produced through practitioner-researcher
collaborations in a number of states including Colorado (OrsquoKeefe et al 2011) Florida (Mears
amp Bales 2009) Kansas (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) and Oregon (Pyrooz et al 2020) Few
however have attempted the quantitative and qualitative depth of this project which is more
comparable to the New York studies of Toch and colleagues (eg Toch amp Adams 1989 Toch
1977) conducted as the new ldquosupermaxrdquo era was coming upon us in the 1980s or the California
studies by Petersilia on re-entry and community supervision (eg Petersilia 2009) Ours
represents an intergenerational academic-practitioner collaboration spanning both eras
Data and Methods
This analysis draws on a longitudinal administrative record set of the entire DOC
population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and
2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of admissions and
releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12 million) infractions
(630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) Discussions with DOC research office
partners about how best to meet the data needs of our study exemplifying our academic-
practitioner collaboration led to two major expansions of the scope and power of this dataset
First to assess how solitary confinement populations had changed since the 2000 UW study
we requested archival information on prisoners in any form of solitary confinement on our
snapshot dates Lacking ready capacity to identify these prisoners DOC offered to provide data
for all prisoners in custody on these dates leaving it to us to identify who was in solitary
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Page 11 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
confinement and when Our willingness to pick our own apples from the DOC data tree led to a
30-fold expansion of our subject pool permitting longitudinal comparisons between solitary
confinement and general population prisoners Second DOC provided us all Washington prison
sentences in the entire history of prisoners in our vastly expanded dataset rather than only the
index offense data we had requested Although information about currently active convictions
accompanies prisoners as they move through DOC retrospectively retrieving links between court
and correctional records is complicated by the multiplicity of charges sentencing policies and
admission statuses that may apply Recognizing a systematic problem when we showed them a
pattern of missing data DOC provided the entire prison conviction history for the 57000 prisoners
in our expanded subject population allowing us both to identify the most serious current offense
and to provide a consistent measure of prisonersrsquo criminal histories
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying uniform coding procedures to
compile event-level data into a subject-level dataset We computed the facility location and
custody status of every prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at
each location and subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as
infractions Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and
plausible counts and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all
prisoners in six snapshot cohorts We also use some inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-
tests) in the analyses we present to test for differences across cohorts and groups
Terminology In Washington DOC policy (2020 320250) maximum custody status is the
highest level of custody classification Maximum custody prisoners are assessed in formal
hearings to pose a sufficient risk to safety ndash whether their own or others ndash to warrant holding
them for an extended period in a maximum-security location isolated by architecture procedure
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Justice Quarterly Page 12 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and staffing As legal expert Fred Cohen notes maximum custody is a risk-based classification
justified as a preventive measure rather than a punitive sanction (2008) In Washington DOC
prisoners first enter solitary confinement through short-term administrative segregation (Ad-
Seg) placements usually awaiting adjudication following an infraction Infraction of a specific
prison rule may result in a disciplinary hearing and the sanction of a disciplinary segregation (D-
Seg) placement Alternatively multiple infractions other behavior patterns or an extended stay
in administrative segregation may lead to a re-classification as maximum custody (Max)
In DOC Intensive Management Units (IMUs) are the most secure housing facilities The
term ldquosupermaxrdquo is not a category of institution in DOC instead the state has five IMUs located
at Clallam Bay Corrections Center (CC) Monroe CC Washington CC (ldquoSheltonrdquo) Stafford
Creek CC and the Washington State Penitentiary (called Walla Walla or the ldquoconcrete mamardquo
(Hoffman amp McCoy 2018)) IMUs feature distinct security perimeters with advanced
technology for controlling entrances gates and doors strict procedures for prisoner movement
and no normal occasions for prisoners to share space with others unless shackled Though exact
conditions (like cell size and degree of access to natural light) vary across IMUs the uniformly
restrictive conditions impose intense isolation (often for extended periods of time) comparable to
conditions in other state supermaxes IMUs are adjacent to the ldquomain institutionrdquo (a correctional
center or complex may have multiple facilities or stand-alone buildings sharing a common
Superintendent) to allow escorting prisoners on foot without delay As a Lieutenant at Shelton
said during a prison visit ldquoNothing happens fast around here except going to the IMUrdquo
Transfers between facilities are recorded in DOCrsquos movement records allowing us to
identify who was placed in IMUs and for how long Transfers in and out of cells within a facility
however are recorded as housing changes likely 50 million in number for our subjects vastly
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Page 13 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
exceeding our and DOCrsquos ability to retrieve and compile absent unlimited resources2 Therefore
inter-facility movement records in our data do not capture prisoners isolated on Ad-Seg or D-Seg
status (AdDSeg status) inside a main institution Importantly AdDSeg prisoners who were
living under comparably stringent conditions as IMU-Max prisoners in two decrepit segregation
units within the main institutions at two of Washingtonrsquos oldest prisons ndash Walla Walla and
Monroe ndash are not captured in our data These two units with a combined capacity of 250 closed
in 2011 but were replaced (and then some) by 200 new IMU beds at each prison Our inability
to identify all such AdDSeg prisoners through movement records requires caution in how the
terms ldquoIMUrdquo versus ldquosolitary confinementrdquo are used in our findings Because of this limitation
we center our trend and comparative analyses on the maximum custody group who are reliably
identified over the entire course of our study period and whose long-term presence in maximum
security settings raises the sharpest ethical issues (Lovell 2014)
Results
To contextualize findings on the size and characteristics of Washingtonrsquos solitary
confinement population we first describe overall patterns in the state prison population between
2002 and 2017 Table 1 displays counts and demographic crime type sentence length and gang
affiliation characteristics for the entire prison population incarcerated on each of the six snapshot
dates Washington Statersquos prison population grew by 13 despite changes in sentencing policy
(SHB2338 2002) that were expected to reduce imprisonment by lessening penalties and
providing treatment alternatives for drug-related offenses The proportion of prisoners
incarcerated for drug or other offenses declined substantially while those incarcerated for
violent non-sexual offenses increased by nearly 17 between 2002 and 2017 (plt001)3
Reflecting the shift toward more violent offenses average sentence lengths increased
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Justice Quarterly Page 14 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
significantly as did the average age of prisoners The proportion of Hispanic prisoners increased
by 17 while the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners decreased by 16 (plt001) and
White non-Hispanic representation remained stable4
Affiliation with security threat groups (STG) or prison gangs increased as well in 2017
over one in four prisoners (26) was identified as a member of an STG up from 19 in 2002
The growth of gang affiliation was not equally distributed across racial and ethnic groups5
While rates of gang affiliation for White non-Hispanic prisoners remained relatively low over
the fifteen-year period gang affiliation among prisoners of color increased substantially
between 2002 and 2017 the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners classified as gang-
affiliated rose from 35 to 41 for Hispanic prisoners from 28 to 53 a sharp increase with
substantial consequences for solitary confinement practices
[TABLE 1 NEAR HERE]
Disentangling the Solitary Population Table 2 presents trends in solitary confinement use by
both custody status (classification) and location (facility) We distinguish four groups either
classified at the highest custody level (Maximum labeled ldquoMaxrdquo) or located in the most
restrictive locations (IMUs) At the center of our analysis are prisoners both classified Max and
housed in IMUs (denoted by IMU-Max) Next are prisoners who have not been reclassified
Max but are housed in IMUs for administrative or disciplinary segregation (IMU-AdDSeg)
Third for treatment purposes some Max prisoners are housed at the Special Offender Unit
(SOU) at Monroe designed to address serious behavioral health needs or at the Inmate
Transitional Pod (ITP) at Clallam Bay a program-focused unit for prisoners transitioning out of
solitary confinement (denoted by Max-Tx) Finally a residual group of Max prisoners could not
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Page 15 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
For Peer Review Only
be assigned a facility type because on the snapshot date they were on hospital or court release
or awaiting transfers to an IMU SOU or ITP (Other-Max)6
Solitary confinement use (in IMU-Max IMU-AdDseg and Total IMU) far outpaces
population growth over our study period in the state growing at least 130 (in IMU-Max)
compared to a 13 growth in the state prison population As explained earlier IMU-Max
represents a clearly defined population with reliable snapshot counts for prisoners subjected to
long-term solitary confinement over the entire study period but it excludes prisoners in AdDSeg
either in the IMU or in other within-facility units not identifiable in the between-facility
movement records we analyze Figure 1 illustrates differences in rates and patterns of growth in
IMU-Max and total prison populations accompanied by changes in average length of stay (LOS)
for the IMU-Max group on their snapshot date assignments
[TABLE 2 amp FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE]
One-day counts capture those physically held in IMUs on snapshot dates and demonstrate
that a small but increasing proportion of Washingtonrsquos prison population was held in solitary
confinement across snapshots in both IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg groups One-day counts
however do not account for movement in and out of IMUs at other points To better understand
both the prevalence and duration of placement in solitary we used event-level movement
information to calculate the cumulative amount of time each prisoner spent in solitary
confinement from admission to snapshot date Over the study period a majority of prisoners in
DOC in each snapshot cohort were never placed in solitary confinement but a substantial and
growing proportion of prisoners had spent time in these units The proportion of prisoners
spending at least one day in an IMU between their prison admission and snapshot dates had
increased from 242 in 2002 to 34 in 2017 Prisoners in 2002 spent an average of 6 weeks in
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Justice Quarterly Page 16 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
IMUs from admission to snapshot by 2017 time spent in IMU increased significantly to an
average of 12 weeks (plt001) Changes in mean values are skewed by a few outliers who have
spent their entire (long or life) prison sentences in an IMU beginning decades before and
extending through the study period To counter the skew we binned cumulative days in IMU
into distinct groups 0 days 1-45 days 46-90 days 91 days to 1 year and over 1 year7
Pooling across all cohorts we find that more than half of those who spent at least one day in
an IMU stayed for between 1 and 45 days cumulatively The second largest group (186)
cumulatively spent between three months and one year in solitary confinement and a substantial
proportion (165) of those placed in an IMU spent more than one year there The changing
distribution of cumulative time spent in IMUs reinforces the finding that average time spent in
solitary increased over the study period More prisoners spent at least one day in IMU and
proportions of prisoners in each cumulative length of stay group increased substantially led by
those spending between 46 and 90 days and those spending more than one year in IMU In total
our data demonstrate a greater prevalence of IMU placement across the population over time
and an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs8
In addition to examining cumulative days spent in IMU for the full prison population we
also calculated mean lengths of stay (LOS) in IMUs for both the IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg
groups9 Both groups spent substantial amounts of time in IMU settings although as expected
those in IMU-Max had markedly longer stays in IMU than the IMU-AdDSeg group Across the
study period average time in IMU-Max ranged from 7 to 12 months compared to 2 to 4 months
for the IMU-AdDSeg group The mean LOS for IMU-Max fluctuated generally increasing
until 2011 followed by a decline through 2017 to a level just below the mean LOS in 2002
(Figure 1) For the IMU-AdDSeg group mean LOS dropped even more substantially after
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For Peer Review Only
Page 17 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
2011 Changes in average LOS for both groups were a factor in periods of growth in total IMU
populations prior to 2008 as well as in declines of IMU populations after 2011
The Maximum Custody IMU Population Table 3 compares demographic criminal history gang
status and behavioral histories of IMU-Max and general population (GP) prisoners across
snapshots10 showing significant differences between these groups In both populations White
non-Hispanic prisoners represented the largest group However compared to the GP prisoners
of Hispanic ethnicity were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max while White non-
Hispanic prisoners are under-represented (plt001) Black non-Hispanic people were slightly
under-represented among IMU-Max prisoners relative to their presence in the GP These
disparities diverge over time the proportion of Hispanic prisoners in the IMU-Max population
increased by nearly 34 between 2002 and 2017 while the proportions of all other racial and
ethnic groups decreased
[TABLE 3 ABOUT HERE]
IMU-Max prisoners have more serious conviction and in-prison misconduct histories
than GP prisoners Across cohorts nearly three-quarters (73) of IMU-Max prisoners were
convicted of non-sexual violent offenses compared with just 44 of GP prisoners The IMU-
Max group were also first convicted of prison-eligible offenses at a younger age on average
than those in the GP (plt001) Further in-prison misconduct rates were higher and more serious
for the IMU-Max group annual infraction rates for these prisoners were more than double GP
rates and IMU-Max prisoners committed far more violent infractions and staff assaults than
those in GP (plt001)11 Nevertheless serious misconduct appeared to decline substantially
across IMU-Max prisoner snapshots (but not for GP) with average annual infraction rates among
IMU-Max prisoners falling from 83 in 2002 to 49 in 2017 (plt001) average numbers of violent
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 18 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
infractions decreasing from 4 to 3 (plt05) and average numbers of staff assaults decreasing from
12 to 06 (plt05)
Gang members were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max compared to GP (66
to 22 pooled across all snapshot years) While the prevalence of gang membership grew in
both groups over time patterns of gang affiliation across racial-ethnic sub-categories behaved
differently within the IMU-Max and GP groups Among GP prisoners the proportion of those
affiliated with Hispanic gangs grew by 118 from 2002 to 2017 among IMU-Max prisoners
Hispanic gang membership grew substantially (55) but at a lower rate than in the GP Black
gang membership on the other hand grew by just 7 in the GP but fell by 24 among IMU-
Max prisoners Explaining these patterns is outside the scope of the present analysis but the
scale of divergence in patterns across both racial-ethnic sub-categories of gang affiliates and GP
and IMU-Max populations merits future attention
Discussion
Our findings draw on an especially robust dataset including (1) multiple individual
characteristics like gang status and infraction rates each one of which has constituted the sole
focus of previous analyses (2) snapshot data that covers both the entire prison population and
each individualrsquos entire criminal and incarceration history and (3) a fifteen-year period of
analysis over six snapshot dates a longer time period than in previous studies of solitary
confinement Such a rich dataset makes a succinct analysis of a subset of findings challenging to
present Here we focus on our analytic methods an overview of the characteristics of people in
and out of solitary confinement and overall patterns in solitary confinement use
First we measure the sites subjects and varieties of solitary confinement in terms of the
intersection of location and custody status This operational taxonomy along with the prisoner
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For Peer Review Only
Page 19 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
characteristics associated with solitary confinement placements was achieved by developing an
extensive population analysis script that compiled a correctional dataset tracking events
movements and dispositions into an analytic dataset permitting analysis of patterns of prisoner
behavior and facility placements over time Our multi-generational researcher-practitioner
collaboration with Washington DOC facilitated both obtaining and interpreting this data In turn
we hope our operational taxonomy will facilitate more precise measurements of solitary
confinement use applicable and comparable across the vicissitudes of different correctional
systemsrsquo varied labels for security levels housing locations and solitary confinement practices
(eg Mears et al 2019)
Second we provide an overview and comparison of characteristics of people in solitary
confinement focusing on the specifically targeted IMU-Max group to provide a clear contrast to
general population prisoners Over time the average IMU-Max prisoner was increasingly likely
to be older Hispanic convicted of a violent offense and gang affiliated but decreasingly likely
to have assaulted a staff member Like Pyrooz amp Mitchell (2019) we find gang members over-
represented in solitary confinement relative to their representation in the general prison
population We also find that Hispanic prisoners are increasingly over-represented in solitary
confinement providing evidence of the racially disproportionate impact of solitary confinement
(eg Sakoda amp Simes 2019 Schlanger 2012 Reiter 2012) Our longitudinal analysis shows this
disproportion steadily increasing over time at a faster rate than gang membership in the general
prison system which increased only slightly over our period of analysis As in other studies
finding misconduct associated with solitary confinement placement (eg Labrecque amp Smith
2019) we find that prisoners in solitary confinement have significantly and consistently higher
annual infraction violent infraction and staff assault rates than general population prisoners
15 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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Justice Quarterly Page 20 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
However all three measures of infractions despite remaining fairly stable throughout the
system generally declined in IMU-Max over time
Rendering population patterns visible also renders visible new questions about what
combination of individual behavior patterns and institutional policies produce the changes we
see Have IMU-Max prisoners become less violent and dangerous Have institutional policies
about identifying gang members and behavioral or affiliation criteria for max custody changed
When the UW solitary confinement study was conducted 20 years ago pioneering experiments
in relaxing the stringency of solitary confinement conditions and supporting prisoners in
changing course had begun at Shelton (Rhodes 2004) at that time Washington DOC leaders
justified IMUs as a necessary response to White Supremacist groups and IMU reforms focused
on mitigating organized attacks and challenges to correctional authority by these groups The late
2010s brought another round of reforms attempting to relax the stringent conditions of solitary
confinement this time factional rivalries among gang-affiliated Hispanic prisoners first justified
IMU placements and then became the focus of reform efforts (Warner et al 2014) This
relationship between shifts in prison population demographics behavior patterns and
correctional attention to specific sub-categories of gangs perceived as particularly dangerous
deserves further analysis but identifying the relevant trends as we do here is a first step
Third we see changing patterns in solitary confinement use over time Overall the
prevalence and duration of solitary confinement grew across Washingtonrsquos prison population
between 2002 and 2017 The raw numbers and rates of both Max custody status prisoners and
prisoners in IMU locations more than doubled from 2002 to 2017 And an increasing proportion
of people throughout the system experienced solitary confinement in 2017 more than 1 in 3
prisoners had spent at least a day in solitary compared to 1 in 4 in 2002 This trend echoes and
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 16
For Peer Review Only
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Page 21 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
quantifies Sakoda amp Simesrsquo argument that solitary confinement is a ldquonormal event during
imprisonmentrdquo (2019 2) Although rates of solitary confinement use increased overall average
lengths of stay in solitary confinement (which peaked in 2011 in tandem with the peak years of
solitary confinement use in Washington) decreased By 2017 average lengths of stay on IMU-
Max and IMU-AdDSeg (along with the standard deviations) were the shortest they had been in
the state since 2002 This analysis reveals that Washington DOC had some success in reducing
its use of solitary confinement from peak levels and especially in shortening lengths of stay in
these conditions But what forces facilitated or constrained these reductions
The dramatic shifts we document in both numbers of people in solitary confinement and
durations of stays ndash without any associated dramatic shifts in the usually assumed behavioral
predictors of solitary confinement like overall institutional rates of gang membership or violent
infractions ndash suggest the influence of other institutional factors (cf Lynch 2020) While
additional analysis is needed we can thanks to our iterative conversations with DOC officials
suggest two institutional factors that influenced rates and durations of solitary confinement use
during periods of abrupt change bed capacity increases and local-level rehabilitative
programming changes
First between 2000 and 2008 while DOCrsquos expanding capacity was continually
outpaced by population growth (despite legislative changes intended to reduce imprisonment
WSIPP 2006) IMU capacity in Washington expanded by 520 beds Three years later in 2011
both IMU-Max counts and average LOS peaked Both then decreased in tandem with decreasing
IMU capacity down 212 beds as of 2017 as some units were re-purposed for other special
groups such as parole violators and managed with far less restrictive protocols While the
relationship between capacity IMU counts and length of stay deserves its own focused analysis
17 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 22 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
we have taken the first step by identifying relevant trends These findings suggest that
constraining capacity is likely a key to long-term reductions in solitary confinement along with
reducing lengths of stay and rate of assignments into maximum security settings like IMUs
Second between 2011 and 2014 Washington DOC built upon previous local initiatives
at Clallam Bay and Walla Walla IMUs embarking on an effort to ldquoreinvent what segregation can
berdquo partnering with Vera Institute of Justice eliminating some aversive disciplinary policies
and introducing facility-specific missions and group rehabilitative programming across IMUs
(Neyfakh 2015) Both the temporary drop in IMU-Max populations in 2014 and the more
sustained decreases in average lengths of stay for this population between 2011 and 2017 are tied
to these interventions
The correctional population analysis presented in this study exemplifies an approach to
research and collaboration suited to improving the ability of corrections systems to track changes
in prisoner characteristics lengths of stay and overall rates of placement in various forms of
solitary confinement Rendering such patterns visible strengthens researcher-practitioner
collaboration revealing in Washingtonrsquos case what is working ie sustained reductions in
lengths of solitary confinement stays and what is not working ie less sustained reductions in
rates of solitary confinement use By displaying institutional patterns our collaborative research
findings also suggest avenues of analysis to improve outcomes for prisoners and in prison
settings
MAIN TEXT WORD COUNT 6082
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 18
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 23 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
References
Allen DG Lovell DG amp Rhodes LA Correctional mental health a research agenda In JJ
Fitzpatrick PA White eds Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Research Digest New York
Springer pp 180-184
Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
Yale Law School (ASCA-Liman) (2015) Time-In-Cell The ASCA-Liman 2014 National
Survey of Administrative Segregation in Prison (Aug) Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca-
liman_administrativesegregationreportpdf
__ (2018) Reforming restrictive housing The 2018 ASCA-Liman nationwide survey of time-in-
cell Report issued by the Association of State Correctional Administrators (ASCA) amp the
Liman Center for Public Interest Law at Yale Law School Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca_liman_2018_restrictiv
e_housing_released_oct_2018pdf
Beck A J (2015) Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 201112 Washington DC
Bureau of Justice Statistics Government Printing Office Retrieved from
httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112pdf
Berger D (2014) Captive Nation Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina Press
Bloom J and WE Martin (2013) Black Against Empire The History and Politics of the Black
Panther Party Berkeley University of California Press
Briggs CS JL Sundt and TC Castellano (2003) ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security
prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 1341-1376
19 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 24 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Cochran JC E L Toman D P Mears amp W D Bales (2018) Solitary Confinement as
Punishment Examining In-Prison Sanctioning Disparities Justice Quarterly 35(3) 381-411
Cohen Fred 2008 Penal isolation beyond the seriously mentally ill Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 1017-1047
Foucault M (1977) Discipline and Punish The Birth of the Prison New York Pantheon Books
Haney Craig ldquoThe Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement A Systematic Critiquerdquo
Crime and Justice 47 no 1 (2018) pp 365-416
Haney C amp Lynch M 1997 Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of
supermax and solitary confinement NYU Review of Law amp Social Change 23 477ndash570
Hoffman E amp McCoy J 2018 Concrete Mama Prison Profiles from Walla Walla Seattle WA
University of Washington Press
Kaeble D Cowhig M (2018) Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121
US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018
Kurki L amp N Morris (2001) The Purposes Practices and Problems of Supermax Prisons Crime
and Justice 28 358-424
Labrecque R M amp Smith P (2019) Assessing the impact of time spent in restrictive housing
confinement on subsequent measures of institutional adjustment among men in prison Criminal
Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1445-1455
Liebling A (1999) ldquoDoing Research in Prison Breaking the Silencerdquo Theoretical Criminology
Vol 3147ndash73
Logan MW B Dulisse S Peterson MA Morgan TM Olma P Pareacute (2017) Correctional
shorthands Focal concerns and the decision to administer solitary confinement Journal of
Criminal Justice 52 90-100
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 20
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For Peer Review Only
Page 25 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Lucas J W amp Jones M A (2019) An analysis of the deterrent effects of disciplinary segregation
on institutional rule violation rates Criminal Justice Policy Review 30(5) 765-787
Lovell DG 2008 Patterns of disturbance in a supermax population Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 985-1004
Lovell DG (2014) Isolation Vignettes Practical applications of strict scrutiny The Correctional
Law Reporter 26(1) 3
Lovell DG Cloyes KC Allen DG amp Rhodes LA 2000 Who lives in super-maximum
custody A Washington State study Federal Probation 64(2) 33-38
Lovell DG C Johnson KC Cain 2007 Recidivism of Supermax Prisoners in Washington
State Crime and Delinquency 53(4) 633-56
Lynch M (2019) Focally Concerned About Focal Concerns A Conceptual and Methodological
Critique of Sentencing Disparities Research Justice Quarterly 36(7) 1148-1175
Mears D P Hughes V Pesta G B Bales W D Brown J M Cochran J C amp Wooldredge
J (2019) The new solitary confinement A conceptual framework for guiding and assessing
research and policy on ldquoRestrictive housingrdquo Criminal Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1427-
1444
Mears DP amp WD Bales (2009) Supermax Incarceration and Recidivism Criminology 47(4)
1131-66
National Institute of Justice (NIJ) (2016) Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and
Future Directions Washington DC National Institute of Justice
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nij250315pdf
21 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 26 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Neyfakh L 2015 What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate 432015
httpsslatecomnews-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-
surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml
OrsquoKeefe Maureen L Kelli J Klebe Alysha Stucker Kristin Sturm amp William Leggett (2011) One
Year Longitudinal Study of the Psychological Effects of Administrative Segregation Document
No 232973 Washington DC National Criminal Justice Research Service National Institute
of Justice wwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants 232973pdf
Petersilia J (1991) Policy Relevance and the Future of Criminology Criminology 29(1) 1-15
__ (2009) When Prisoners Come Home Parole and Prisoner Re-entry New York Oxford
University Press
Pyrooz D C amp M M Mitchell (2019) The Use of Restrictive Housing on Gang and Non- Gang
Affiliated Inmates in US Prisons Findings from a National Survey of Correctional Agencies
Justice Quarterly 37(4) 590-615
Pyrooz DC RM Labrecque JJ Tostlebe amp B Useem (2020) Views on COVID-19 from Inside
Prison Perspectives of High-security Prisoners Justice Evaluation Journal doi
1010802475197920201777578
Reiter K (2012) Parole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007
Punishment amp Society 14(5) 530-63
__ (2016) 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven
Yale University Press)
__ (2018) ldquoAfter Solitary Confinementrdquo Studies in Law Politics and Society Vol 77 1-29
Reiter K J Ventura D Lovell D Augustine M Barragan T Blair K Chesnut P Dashtgard
G Gonzalez N Pifer J Strong (2020) ldquoPsychological Distress in Solitary Confinement
Symptoms Severity and Prevalence United States 2017-18rdquo American Journal of Public
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 22
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 27 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Health Vol 110 S52-S56
Rhodes LA (2004) Total Confinement Madness and Reason in Maximum Security Berkeley
CA University of California Press
Riveland C (1999) Supermax prisons Overview and general considerations Washington DC
National Institute of Corrections httpstaticnicicgovLibrary014937pdf
Rubin A T amp Reiter K (2018) Continuity in the Face of Penal Innovation Revisiting the
History of American Solitary Confinement Law amp Social Inquiry Vol 434 1604-1632
Sakoda RT amp Simes JT (2019) Solitary Confinement and the US Prison Boom Criminal
Justice Policy Review doi 1011770887403419895315
Schlanger M (2012) Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial
disparities Michigan Journal of Race amp Law 18 241
Smith Peter S 2006 The Effects of Solitary Confinement on Prison Inmates A Brief History and
Review of the Literature In Michael Tonry (ed) Crime and Justice 34 441-528
State of Washington SHB1765 1993
Tasca Melinda amp J Turanovic (2018) Examining Race and Gender Disparities in Restrictive
Housing Placements National Institute of Justice WEB Du Bois Program of Research on
Race and Crime Project SummaryDoc No 252062
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants252062pdf
Toch Hans (1977) Living in Prison The Ecology of Survival New York Free Press
Toch H amp Adams K w Grant D (1989) Coping Maladaptation in prisons Washington DC
Transaction Publishers revised as Acting Out American Psychological Association 2002
23 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 28 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Warner B D Pacholke amp C Kujath (2014) Operation Place Safety First Year in Review
(Washington State Department of Corrections)
httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
WSIPP (Washington State Institute for Public Policy) (2006) Evidence-Based Public Policy
Options to Reduce Future Prison Construction Criminal Justice Costs and Crime Rates
httpswwwwsippwagovReportFile952Wsipp_Evidence-Based-Public-Policy-Options-to-
Reduce-Future-Prison-Construction-Criminal-Justice-Costs-and-Crime-Rates_Full-
Reportpdf
Acknowledgements The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Eldon Vail Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Formerly of the University of Washington Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor and L Clark Johnson provided critical advice at early stages of data compilation At the University of California Irvine Keely Blissmer helped to compile the literature review Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Pasha Dashtgard Gabriela Gonzalez and Justin Strong all participated in data collection and analysis at various stages of this project Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
Funding Details This work was supported by the Langeloth Foundation and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
Disclosure Statement None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
1 In a timely example of how relevant the analysis in the instant study is DOC research staff recently noted that they ldquohad some concernsrdquo with these numbers as originally reported and have revised them upwards re-calculating that in 2015 34 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo according to the ASCA-Liman Definition and in 2017 41 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo by this definition E-mail communication with DOC Department of Research dated Sept 25 and Sept 28 2020 on file with authors The ASCA-Liman report defines ldquorestrictive housingrdquo as ldquoseparating prisoners from the general population and holding them in cells for an average of 22 or more hours per day for 15 continuous days or morerdquo 2 Intra-facility housing changes and periods spent in recently decommissioned internal solitary confinement units are better captured in our related intensive field study dataset of 106 solitary confinement prisoners (Reiter et al 2020) 3 General crime types were derived from DOC codes in the administrative data Violent non-sex offenses include murder manslaughter robbery and assault sex offenses include rape sexual assault child molestation and failure to register as a sex offender property crimes include arson burglary theft forgery trafficking and possession of
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 24
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For Peer Review Only
Page 29 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
stolen property drug crimes include manufacturing delivering or possession with intent to distribute and possession of a controlled substance 4 To avoid confusion we follow DOCs terminology with the term Hispanic which DOC codes separately from race as lsquoHispanic Originrsquo (YN) but we apply these data to define mutually exclusive categories ldquoWhite non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as White and who is not classified as Hispanic Origin ldquoBlack non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as Black and not identified as Hispanic ldquoHispanicrdquo includes any individual whose ethnicity is listed as Hispanic or Latino regardless of any other racial identification ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as AsianPacific Islander Native AmericanAmerican Indian Other Unknown and whose ethnicity is not Hispanic 5 Rates of gang affiliation by racialethnic group were generated by dividing the total number of members in each racialethnic group identified as an STG member by the total number of prisoners of each racialethnic group Table 1 displays the STG membership by racialethnic affiliation of STGs grouped from detailed STG data provided by DOC STGs identified as ldquoWhiterdquo affiliated included Biker Skinhead White Supremacist and Security Threat Concern ldquoBlackrdquo affiliated included Black Gangster Disciples Blood Crip and Vice Lord ldquoHispanicrdquo affiliated included Nortentildeo Surentildeo Paisas La Fuma Cuban and Hispanic-Other ldquoOtherrdquo affiliated included Asian and Other 6 Our original analysis identified an even larger proportion of prisoners in this ldquoOther-Maxrdquo group our practitioner collaborators thought more than 10 was an unlikely proportion of prisoners to be assigned max custody status but still awaiting placement in an IMU or similar facility and encouraged us to evaluate whether some of those ldquoOther-Maxrdquo prisoners were housed out-of-state Indeed when we examined individual cases in the original movement files we found this was true leading us to better specify and exclude those prisoners in our sample of any custody status who were housed out of state 7 Here the 45-day cut point reflects institutionally-mandated administrative hearings required to extend or release an individual from administrative segregation Likewise for those classified as Max (re-)classification reviews only happen every 6-12 months as reflected in the overall longer mean lengths of stay for IMU-Max as opposed to IMU-AdDSeg groups Both represent examples of policies driving patterns in lengths of stay 8 This analysis uses the person (in custody as of the snapshot date) as the unit of analysis Even if a single person has multiple stays in an IMU during the current admission up to the snapshot date they would be counted only once as ldquohaving spent at least one day in an IMUrdquo We further examined the average percentage of days spent in an IMU out of the total number of days in prison up to the snapshot date for each cohort finding an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs across the cohorts While not presented here in detail this finding reinforces the trends in the cumulative time spent in IMU and average LOS analyses 9 Unlike the cumulative days in IMU calculations the average length of stay by classification and confinement levels presented here do not cumulate days in IMU facilities Here each placement in a distinct IMU facility is analyzed as a separate placement term Thus if one prisoner is placed in IMU facility A and subsequently moved to IMU facility B the length of stay in each placement will be counted separately (To the extent individuals have consecutive stays across multiple IMUs then these numbers might undercount average lengths of total stay) Length of stay is calculated from admission date in the current incarceration up until the snapshot date 10 The general population (GP) excludes prisoners housed in IMUs prisoners with a max custody classification held in other locations (ie those in SOU ITP or ldquoOther Locationsrdquo) prisoners held out of state and prisoners whose locations or custody statuses were unknown 11 Violent infractions include seven infraction types aggravated assault on another offender fighting possession of a weapon aggravated assault on a staff member sexual assault of a staff member assault on another offender sexual assault of another offender and assault on a staff member
25 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE
See next page
91
ID
ID
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
PLOS ONE
OPEN ACCESS
Citation Strong JD Reiter K Gonzalez G Tublitz R Augustine D Barragan M et al (2020) The body in isolation The physical health impacts of incarceration in solitary confinement PLoS ONE 15 (10) e0238510 httpsdoiorg101371journal pone0238510
Editor Andrea Knittel University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill UNITED STATES
Received February 19 2020
Accepted August 18 2020
Published October 9 2020
Peer Review History PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process therefore we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final published articles The editorial history of this article is available here httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510
Copyright copy 2020 Strong et al This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original author and source are credited
Data Availability Statement Data cannot be shared publicly because the administrative data we analyze in this paper is drawn from a confidential data file shared with the research team for the
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The body in isolation The physical health
impacts of incarceration in solitary
confinement
Justin D Strong 1 Keramet Reiter1 Gabriela Gonzalez1Dagger Rebecca Tublitz1Dagger
Dallas Augustine1Dagger Melissa Barragan1Dagger Kelsie Chesnut 1Dagger Pasha Dashtgard2Dagger
Natalie Pifer3Dagger Thomas R Blair4Dagger
1 Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Irvine California United
States of America 2 Department of Psychological Sciences University of California Irvine Irvine California
United States of America 3 Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice The University of Rhode Island
Kingston Rhode Island United States of America 4 Department of Psychiatry Southern California
Permanente Medical Group Downey Los Angeles California United States of America
These authors contributed equally to this work
Dagger These authors also contributed equally to this work GG and RT are joint assistant authors on this work
jdstronguciedu
Abstract
We examine how solitary confinement correlates with self-reported adverse physical health
outcomes and how such outcomes extend the understanding of the health disparities associ-
ated with incarceration Using a mixed methods approach we find that solitary confinement is
associated not just with mental but also with physical health problems Given the dispropor-
tionate use of solitary among incarcerated people of color these symptoms are most likely to
affect those populations Drawing from a random sample of prisoners (n = 106) in long-term
solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections in 2017 we con-
ducted semi-structured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assess-
ments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for these subjects We also
conducted a paper survey of the entire long-term solitary confinement population (n = 225
respondents) and analyzed administrative data for the entire population of prisoners in the
state in 2017 (n = 17943) Results reflect qualitative content and descriptive statistical analy-
sis BPRS scores reflect clinically significant somatic concerns in 15 of sample Objective
specification of medical conditions is generally elusive but that itself is a highly informative
finding Using subjective reports we specify and analyze a range of physical symptoms expe-
rienced in solitary confinement (1) skin irritations and weight fluctuation associated with the
restrictive conditions of solitary confinement (2) un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
associated with the restrictive policies of solitary confinement (3) musculoskeletal pain exac-
erbated by both restrictive conditions and policies Administrative data analyses reveal dispro-
portionate rates of racialethnic minorities in solitary confinement This analysis raises the
stakes for future studies to evaluate comparative prevalence of objective medical diagnoses
and potential causal mechanisms for the physical symptoms specified here and for under-
standing differential use of solitary confinement and its medically harmful sequelae
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 1 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
limited purpose of evaluating patterns of solitary confinement use in the Washington department of corrections If any researchers wish to obtain a similar data file from the Washington department of corrections the authors of this paper would be happy to consult with those researchers about the request and the process for obtaining the data In theory the administrative data file used in this study could be accessed again by future researchers Researchers would need to contact the Washington department of corrections Here is the process and relevant contacts httpswww DocWaGovinformationdataresearch Htmrequests We confirm the authors have no special access privileges others would not have to the data underlying our study beyond patient negotiations with the Washington department of corrections about exactly what data would be shared for what purposes
Funding KR received a Langeloth Grant from the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation https wwwlangelothorg The funders had no role in study design data collection and analysis decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist
Introduction
The health implications of solitary confinement have received increasing attention in recent
years [1 2] Although both the conditions and terms defining solitary confinement are con-
tested the practice generally involves being locked in a cell alone for 22 or more hours per
day with extremely limited access to human contact and communication [3 4] Until recently
however research on the health consequences of solitary confinement has focused almost
entirely on the negative impacts on mental health [4ndash8] While initial studies focused on the
effects of sensory deprivation [9ndash11] recent work has examined the impacts of social depriva-
tions [12 13] Such studies have found that placement in solitary confinement has been associ-
ated with symptoms of increased psychological distress such as anxiety depression paranoia
and aggression [14ndash16] A 2018 study for instance found that prisoners who had spent time
in solitary confinement were three times as likely to exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) than those who had not [17] Some researchers however have argued that
the psychological harms of solitary confinement are limited or unverified [18 19] The analy-
ses on which such opinions rely have in turn been criticized for neglecting existing literature
and for other serious methodological concerns including an inability to isolate exposure to
solitary confinement lack of specificity about variability and comparability in actual condi-
tions of confinement and the inapplicability of psychological assessment scales in the prison
context [1 20]
In a study examining the lived experiences of solitary confinement in Washington state we
too focused on documenting the mental health impacts of the practice through qualitative
interviews with a random sample of 106 prisoners in long-term solitary confinement applica-
tion of a Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment at two points in time with those pris-
oners review of medical health records and analysis of administrative data To our surprise
however we found that after anxiety and depression the third most common significant
health symptoms experienced by our subjects were ldquosomatic concernsrdquo defined by the BPRS
as ldquoconcerns over present bodily healthrdquo [21] This observation led us to examine our data sys-
tematically for evidence of the impacts of solitary confinement on physical health and to con-
sider the implications of such impacts for understanding the health disparities enacted by
solitary confinement and by incarceration more broadly
Existing research on the physical health impacts of incarceration demonstrates the need for
further study of both the medical effects of isolation and its racially disparate impacts espe-
cially considering that there are roughly 80000 people in isolation units nationwide and this
population includes a disproportionate number of racial minorities relative to the overall
prison population [22] Outside of prison health disparities by race and ethnicity are well
attested by existing epidemiologic research [23] Notably Black and other racialethnic minor-
ities consistently show lower life expectancies and worse mental health outcomes than whites
[24ndash27] Health disparities persist and are magnified among the incarcerated population
where people of color are disproportionately represented [28ndash30] In particular people in
prison are at higher risk than the general population for substance use disorders psychiatric
disorders victimization and chronic infectious diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C [31ndash34]
Incarceration has also been shown to exacerbate chronic illnesses such as obesity [35] hyper-
tension and asthma [36 37 29] and formerly incarcerated people experience disparately
adverse health outcomes more generally [38] The interaction between the disparate impacts
of race and incarceration on health mean that mass incarceration itself has been identified as a
social determinant of health for Black men in the United States [39 40]
Solitary confinement amplifies the disproportionately adverse effects of mass incarceration
on people of color Depending on the composition of the prison system Blacks andor Latinos
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 2 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
are often over-represented in solitary confinement relative to their (over)representation in the
general prison population [40ndash44] Any concentrated health disadvantages affecting people in
prison and especially people of color is potentially even more concentrated among those liv-
ing in solitary confinement Moreover existing evidence suggests that conditions of solitary
confinement exacerbate health problems and pose a significant public health risk [45 42]
Studies reporting the physical health impacts of solitary confinement have tended to focus
on issues like self-harm and suicide [46 47 8] One recent study has examined the cardiovas-
cular health burdens of solitary confinement [45] A growing body of neuroscience literature
has examined the effects of solitary confinement on the brains of lab animals documenting
that lab animals in isolated environments have ldquoa decrease in the anatomical complexity of the
brainrdquo compared to those in more enriched environments [48 49] (p70) One recent study
found similar effects in Antarctic expeditioners a shrinking hippocampus hypothesized to be
a result of the isolated and monotonous environment [50] Such neuroscience research has
been used in litigation to argue that there is likely a similar effect on humans imprisoned in
solitary confinement [51 48 49] The associations between solitary confinement self-harm
and lab animalsrsquo brain structure suggest comorbidity between mental health and physical
injury in solitary confinement [1 48]
The physical effects of solitary confinement manifest well beyond release from isolation
and from incarceration overall One recent study has examined post-release mortality (from
all causes including suicide murder and drug overdose) associated with previous time in soli-
tary confinement people who had spent time in solitary confinement in North Carolina
between 2000 and 2015 were 24 more likely to die in their first year after release than former
prisoners who had not spent time in solitary confinement [52] Similarly a 2020 study found
that Danish people who had spent time in solitary confinement had higher mortality within
five years of being released from prison compared to those who never spent time in solitary
confinement [53] This mortality risk associated with solitary confinement exceeds the already
high mortality risk associated with incarceration and release from prison [52ndash54]
In sum while many studies have examined the relationship between incarceration and
health and some studies have examined the relationship between solitary confinement and
mental health the existing literature lacks analysis of disparate physical health outcomes across
levels and severity of confinement [2] especially within isolation and for incarcerated people
of color To our knowledge this article is the first of its kind to consider associations between
solitary confinement and a range of physical health problems and to incorporate explicit con-
sideration of racial health disparities
Methods and materials
To explore the physical health problems experienced in isolation we draw upon a research
study of people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of
Corrections (WADOC) The study consists of four dimensions of participant data 1 surveys
of prisoners in solitary confinement 2 in-depth interviews with a random sample of prisoners
in solitary confinement 3 reviews of the medical (covering mental and physical health) files
as well as the disciplinary records for this subset of prisoners and 4 administrative data for
the entire 2017 prison population provided by the WADOC Data was collected in 2017 and
2018
Setting
WADOC is a mid-sized state prison system with the 12th lowest rate of incarceration of the 50
United States [20] The state and its prison system have a reputation for being progressive
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 3 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
including engaging in reforms to minimize the use of solitary confinement statewide and for
inviting independent academic researchers to evaluate conditions and programs [20 55ndash57]
Five of the statersquos 12 prison facilities have an Intensive Management Unit (IMU) an all-male
unit or building housing people in solitary confinement (with highly restricted access to com-
missary phones radios televisions visitors and roughly 10 hours per week out-of-cell) for
durations ranging from months to years Our study focused on people within the IMUs on
ldquomaximum custody statusrdquo the highest security level assigned to state prisoners housed in the
IMU for an indeterminate period usually following one or more rule violations with return to
the general prison population contingent on meeting specific benchmarks
Participant sampling
First paper surveys were distributed in-person (and collected on the same day) to all 363 peo-
ple on maximum custody status in the five state IMUs in the spring of 2017 Next during the
summer of 2017 roughly one-third (29) of all 363 people on maximum custody status in
IMUs were interviewed selected from randomly ordered lists of the population of each IMU
One year later (2018) all participants from our initial random sample who were still incarcer-
ated one year later including those no longer housed in the IMU were re-interviewed We
also reviewed paper medical and disciplinary files for each consenting year-one interview par-
ticipant Interviews file reviews and observations were conducted over two separate three-
week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team members
Finally we received administrative data on all people within the state prison system as of July
1 2017
Research team training
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and develop the interview instru-
ment Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol for
administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment train-
ing sessions with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Venturamdashin year one and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Dr Ventura conducted an interra-
ter reliability analysis confirming trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or
greater for the BPRS This extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members (9
women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral students (9) with
expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement settings identified
and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being studied and mini-
mized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application of questions
and assessments Eight of the authors on this paper participated in interviews two participated
only in data analysis
Interviews
On site in the Washington State IMUs after the random sample was drawn and willing partici-
pants identified prison staff escorted participants one at a time to a confidential area (moni-
tored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff) Prior to conducting interviews interviewers
informed participants that participation was voluntary and would not involve incentives
administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all informa-
tion shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent security-
related threatrdquo (In the highly restrictive setting of the IMU any incentive beyond providing
human contact and an attentive listener would both run the risk of being an undue influence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 4 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
coercing participation and be administratively prohibited) Participants provided oral consent
to participate in the interview Immediately following interviews interviewers asked partici-
pants whether they consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to partici-
pating in one-year follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all
but two (n = 104) consented in writing to medical file reviews Following interviews interview-
ers reviewed consenting participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of diagnoses prescrip-
tions and substance abuse status WADOC additionally provided electronic administrative
health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as comparable popula-
tion-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
All identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings tran-
scripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible
only through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in
data cleaning and linking The University of California Irvine Office of Research Institutional
Review Board approved this study (HS 2016ndash2816) and the WADOC Research Department
reviewed this approval
Data collection instruments
The initial paper survey of people confined in the WADOC IMU consisted of 36 numbered
questions (each containing a combination of yesno ordinal bubble options and short answer
sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to explain or elaborate on their answers)
about experiences in IMUs conditions of confinement health and well-being and demo-
graphic background drawing from existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [58ndash
62] Survey in S1 Text In all there were 89 substantive items on the survey (excluding demo-
graphic questions) coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU) ordinal (eg
daily weekly monthly describing frequency of interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) vari-
ables In this paper we report on the results of a sub-set of five quantitatively coded items relat-
ing to health from this larger survey This survey functioned as a pilot instrument for the in-
person interviews allowing us to ensure questions were clear and relevant yielding responses
comparable across subjects and institutional contexts and providing our interviewers with a
baseline description of participantsrsquo experiences prior to conducting qualitative interviews
The qualitative interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured questions
(each containing a combination of yesno questions and probing open-ended follow-up ques-
tions) seeking elaboration on responses from the survey questions and also drawing from
existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [60ndash63] including conditions of daily life
(prior to and during isolation) perceived state of physical and mental health access to medical
treatment and experiences with required programming in the IMU among other topics
Interview instrument in S2 Text We first used the instrument at the smallest IMU in Wash-
ington interviewing 15 prisoners and we then revised both the wording and ordering of ques-
tions for maximum clarity and engagement in the remaining 91 interviews we conducted
across the four other IMUs in the state In total 40 of the substantive items on the interview
instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 18 embedded questions designed to
establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg
How much does it cost to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have you noticed any
changes in your health since you have been in this IMU) variables Such questions always
included open-ended follow-up questions (eg Can you describe those changes) Transcribed
responses to those open-ended follow-up questions which related in any way to physical
health constitute the central source of data analyzed in this paper
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 5 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Interviews ranged in length from 45 minutes to three hours Follow-up interviews lasted
between 45 minutes and two hours The condensed year-two instrument contained approxi-
mately 70 questions largely replicating the year-one questions but excluding the background
demographic questions and questions about experiences over time in prison and adjusting
some questions to address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status
As part of both initial and follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psy-
chological assessment both during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following
(for the 10 observational items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech)
the interviews For self-report questions (14 items) embedded in the interview guide inter-
viewers asked about the presence of symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard [20]
Interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier audio recorded (with permis-
sion) professionally transcribed in Microsoft Word translated (in one case from Spanish into
English) by research team members systematically stripped of identifying information and
then systematically checked against the original audio by the original interviewer(s) Interviews
were linked by random identifier to BPRS score sheets (which were scanned and entered into
Microsoft Excel for descriptive statistical analysis) scanned medical file review notes and
WADOC administrative data
Data analysis amp reporting
BPRS and other administrative data were imported into Statistical Package for Social Science
(SPSS) (IBM Armonk NY) and Stata (StataCorp LLC College Station TX) to generate
descriptive statistics including the comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS
items and factors relating to physical health and demographics of the sample interview popula-
tion as compared to the IMU population the overall state prison population and the overall
population of the state itself Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos test were performed to evaluate
the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing location time and raceethnicity chi
square tests of homogeneity were performed to compare racialethnic distributions in the
IMU population the general prison population and the Washington state population The
demographic data utilizes a confidential data file from the WADOC
Transcribed interviews were analyzed using Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software Develop-
ment GmbH Berlin Germany) Six team members who had also conducted interviews
engaged in an iterative and recursive coding process Consistent with the tenets of constructivist
grounded theory coders inductively explored how participants make meaning of their experi-
ences (here their time in solitary confinement) [63 64] This process included initial line-by-
line open-coding of a subset of transcripts which generated a list of 214 codes grouped into 11
major categories (eg Health) with sub-themes (eg physical health) [63] Some of these initial
codes and categories corresponded with specific questions on our interview instrument (most
relevant for the instant analysis question 29 concerned medical ldquokitesrdquo and questions 30 31
and 38 concerned physical health and somatic concerns) However open-ended questions also
yielded responses related to these topics and were so coded Given the constraints of the prison
setting (in-person contact is expensive and time-consuming mail contact is not confidential
because of prison censoring policies) participants have not provided systematic feedback on
their transcripts or our findings However the year-two interviews did give research team mem-
bers an opportunity to discuss year-one themes with participants
All quotations presented in this paper were initially identified in the first phase of our cod-
ing process by one of three (out of our initial 214) codes ldquosomatic concernsrdquo ldquophysical healthrdquo
or ldquokitesrdquo (the standard slang term for a paper form handed to a correctional officer to request
medical attention) Two coders then used intermediate focused coding techniques to
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 6 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
re-code these 319 quotes exploring the relationship between solitary confinement condi-
tions and policies and physical health problems ldquotransform[ing] basic data into more abstract
concepts and allowing the theory to emerge from the datardquo [64 p 5]
Notes from reviewing participantsrsquo paper medical files corroborate details from the qualita-
tive analysis that systematically anchors this data Each participant has been assigned a pseudo-
nym and because we are also exploring the racially disparate impact of the health problems we
identify we specify each quoted participantrsquos self-identified race or ethnicity We linked quota-
tions to specific racialethnic identities only after quotations were selected for inclusion in this
manuscript as representative of the themes we identified in coding
Results
In total 225 prisoners in IMU (62) responded to our in-person survey The refusal rate of
initial interviews was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of prison-
ers [15 58 59 65] The drop-out rate of our sample for the one-year follow-up interviews was
comparable to other studies at 25 there were 4 refusals 21 institutional out-of-state and
parole transfers precluding follow-up and one death [58ndash61] Our random sample of 106 (all-
male) IMU prisoners reflects a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU mean of 5
prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Among our participants 42 were white 12
were African American 23 were Latino 23 were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differ-
ences between our participants and all people held in IMU at the time of our sample People in
the general prison population at the time of our sample are notably different as they are older
less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang-affili-
ated and less likely to be Latino than those held in IMU [20] (We discuss racial differences
across these populations further in the final results sub-section)
Prevalence of somatic concerns
As an initial basis for describing physical symptoms experienced in solitary confinement we
present a quantitative analysis of the prevalence of somatic concerns in our random sample of
106 people held in IMU and the variability of these concerns across time and housing location
In 2017 15 of participants reported having clinically significant (formally defined as a sever-
ity of 4 or higher out of a possible 7) somatic concerns (formally defined as ldquoconcern over pres-
ent bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment [21] In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80
respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 reported clinically signifi-
cant ratings of somatic concern
While ratings of clinically significant somatic concern mostly varied within participants
over time our analysis indicated some persistence of somatic issues across the two assessment
periods Of those who reported clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were
re-interviewed in 2018 (12 respondents 4 were unavailable for re-interview) 25 (3 respon-
dents) indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic issues in 2018 An exact McNe-
marrsquos test revealed no statistically significant relationship between the proportion of
respondents reporting clinically significant somatic concerns in 2017 and 2018 (p = 0 0) In the initial 2017 assessment all study subjects were housed in IMU At the time of re-
interview in 2018 52 respondents had moved into the general prison population while 28
remained in IMU Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 (6 of 28) reported clinically sig-
nificant somatic concerns compared to just 8 of those housed in the general prison popula-
tion (4 of 52) While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
concern in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 confidence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 7 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test) No significant differences were observed in the distribution
of clinically significant somatic concern ratings across racial and ethnic groups
Complementing the BPRS assessment data from the random sample of 106 individuals in
IMU custody survey data collected from the full IMU population in 2017 further indicated the
prevalence of somatic concerns among this population Of the 225 survey respondents 63
expressed health concerns 48 were taking medication 17 had arthritis and 8 had experi-
enced a fall in solitary confinement Importantly for the analysis of emerging symptoms in par-
ticular 82 replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo
while in the IMU These survey results like the BPRS somatic concern results benefit from tri-
angulation with our qualitative data
Specifying physical symptoms
We identify three categories of physical symptoms people experience in solitary confinement
each associated with different aspects of IMU housing symptoms associated with deprivation
conditions symptoms associated with deprivation policies limiting access to healthcare and
chronic musculoskeletal pain exacerbated by the intersection of deprivation conditions and
deprivation policies In each category we analyze how the institution of solitary confinement
shapes both physical health outcomes and perceptions of health for people housed in solitary
confinement revealing both the mechanisms of physical health deterioration and the accentu-
ated comorbidity of physical and mental health in solitary confinement
Deprivation conditions Our participants described a range of physical ailments directly
connected to the conditions of their confinement especially the various deprivations of movement
provisions (from food to toiletries) and human contact inherent in the institutional restrictions
defining solitary confinement Skin irritations and weight fluctuations were the most common of
these participants experienced both as co-morbid with anxiety and other health issues
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They
understood these conditions as being directly associated the poor air and water quality irritat-
ing hygiene products and lack of sun exposure inherent to their conditions of solitary confine-
ment People in the IMU (unlike those in the general prison population) usually cannot
purchase or trade for alternative higher-quality hygiene products their cells have limited nat-
ural light (at best a window far above eye-level at worst no window) and even the exercise
areas frequently have limited natural light Indeed research has documented how isolation can
cause vitamin D deficiency due to lack of natural light exposure [66]
As Joseph (white) explained an ostensibly trivial physical problem like dandruff can
inspire a sense of helplessness in the IMU
Well I try not to [think about] what happens to my body Because yoursquore going to obsess
on it probably Minor things become huge when yoursquore in segregation and so something
that youndashyou as being free in society can alleviate by going to you know to [the store] or
whatever and just get a dandruff shampoo You canrsquot do that here And kiting medical and
telling them ldquoHey I have a severe problem with dermatitis and my headrsquos itching and Irsquove
got bleeding scabs on my headrdquo or whatever the case may be therersquos nothing that we can
do here Yoursquore SOL [shit out of luck]
Josephrsquos inability to treat his skin irritations himself led to both helplessness and obsessive-
ness further exacerbating the discomfort and potential health consequences of the issue This
case illustrates how a free personrsquos flaky skin or minor embarrassment becomes a potentially
severe medical problem in solitary confinement entailing bleeding scabs on the scalp
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 8 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Participants frequently experienced fluctuations in body weight and as with skin irritations
connected these symptoms to conditions inherent to solitary confinement What started as
simple observations about diet exercise and appearance often turned into analyses of the
impact of conditions of confinement on physical as well as mental health Simon (Black) dis-
cussed being ldquoreal worriedrdquo about his weight
The only reason I know theyrsquore not really giving us the calorie needs theyrsquore supposed to
give us is because I feel like Irsquom losing more muscle than I am fat And to lose more muscle
than fat is because yoursquore not getting the nutrients that you need
Not only is weight loss a significant source of anxiety for Simon but he connects the depri-
vations of confinementndashthe lack of nutritious food and sufficient caloriesndashto physical changes
in his body Whether his explanation is correct or simple lack of physical activity is more likely
to explain the changes accurately IMU confinement ostensibly produced the change
Participants also described restricting their own dietary intake beyond the already limited
rations (usually calculated to meet the minimum daily calorie intake standards) for a variety
of reasons from the quality of the food to their emotional state Michael (Latino) described
being suspicious of staff having tampered with his food ldquoI got my breakfast bowl and there
was a tear on the plastic [ ] Sometimes your mind plays tricks on you like theyrsquore trying to
poison you or somethingrdquo While Michael noted that his suspicions were likely just in his
mind Philip (Black) asserted ldquoThey was poisoning my foodndashthey control everything They
can even manipulate the water Irsquom so fucking serious this place is highly technologically
advancedrdquo For those like Michael and Philip psychological states associated with the condi-
tions of confinement (eg suspiciousness paranoia and potentially psychosis) caused them to
restrict their food intake resulting in weight loss Indeed both Michael and Philip had docu-
mented diagnoses of mental illness in their medical files bipolar disorder and undifferentiated
schizophrenia respectively Food restrictions can of course lead to more imminently danger-
ous conditions such as dehydration electrolyte imbalances or renal failurendashnone of which are
likely to be subject to objective evaluation in the IMU as we discuss further in the next sub-
section on the impacts of deprivation policies
Some prisoners made a more direct connection between their mental health their dietary
intake and their physical health For instance Kai (Native American) said
I donrsquot work out because I have a problem breathing This is the first time Irsquove ever done
a program [IMU term] where Irsquove felt like I was breaking Because before Irsquod be working
out Now Irsquom stuck in this Irsquom battling mentally with everything going on Which
affected my body effects my eating sometimes Irsquoll just take the [food] tray but Irsquoll flush the
stuff down the toilet
As Kai suggests in the IMU exercise functions not only as a means to practice physical fit-
ness but also to provide structure for people to manage both their days and the mental strain of
being in isolation When asked a general question like ldquohow are you doing in the IMUrdquo many
participants like Kai referenced whether or not they were engaging in exercise as a way to
gauge how they were faring overall People like Kai shared feelings of lethargy or feeling too
overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day induced by long periods in solitary confine-
ment Their weight fluctuated during these cycles going down with regular and social exercise
routines going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exer-
cise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations high-
light the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 9 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Deprivation policies Our participants described multiple situations in which official
IMU policies and unofficial IMU practices exacerbated their physical ailments especially their
chronic health problems Such policies and practices included the prioritization of security
over care in emergency situations disruptions in care upon transfer into the IMU and over-
whelming administrative hurdles to accessing care in the first place If prisons are largely
unequipped to provide the appropriate care and environment for chronic medical problems
[67 31] our findings reveal both the specific mechanisms by which solitary confinement poli-
cies amplify the usual bureaucratic challenges of accessing healthcare in prison and the kinds
of physical health problems that go unaddressed as a result
First in cases of medical emergencies people housed in the IMU have response buttons in
their cells they can press to alert staff However many of the people we interviewed both
doubted whether staff would respond swiftly enough in an actual emergency and worried
about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response
if medical staff ultimately deemed their problem non-emergent Indeed prisoners perceived
IMU policies as systematically prioritizing incapacitation over medical attention Carl (white)
described an incident where he experienced delayed care and was pepper sprayed after having
suffered from a seizure all because he was unable to comply with orders to stand following the
episode
I had a serious seizure And I was laying on the floor and I had defecated I was laying in a
puddle of puke Well [the guards] had come to the door and I guess they had called med-
ical and they were standing there for 45 minutes yelling ldquoStand up and cuff up so we can
give you medical attentionrdquo They did not pop the door and go in there and give me medical
attention And so unknown to me they popped the cuff port and they sprayed OC [pepper
spray] in there And then they came in They noticed that I was unconscious and finally a
nurse looked at my medical file and shersquos like ldquohersquos epilepticrdquo
In the tense environment of the IMU where staff manage people with histories of violating
prison rules assaulting staff and often serious mental health needs immediate security con-
cerns readily take priority over assessing medical histories and providing healthcare
Second simply being transferred into the IMU often disrupted care in dangerous ways For
instance Julian (Hawaiian) described how when he was transferred into a new solitary con-
finement unit he had to restart the process of seeking treatment for (and even simple acknowl-
edgement of) recurring kidney stones Whereas he had fought and been able to receive x-rays
and medication to help manage his kidney pain at his prior institution he now found this fight
to be futile at his new facility ldquoTheyrsquore just going to take me out of room take me over there to
medical and theyrsquore going to be like oh herersquos the hot water or hot bag or whateverrdquo And
Tony (Native Americanwhite) described a battery of physical and mental health issuesndashan
enlarged prostate a painful cyst that needed to be surgically removed varicose veins ldquochronic
suicidal thoughtsrdquo anxiety and depressionndashall requiring medications which he had difficulty
maintaining access to in the IMU For instance he described how both his Amitriptyline
which partly treated his periodic limb movement sleep disorder and his seizure medication
Dilantin were both discontinued in the IMU resulting in serious injuries to his foot and head
Third a number of bureaucratic hurdles and barriers discouraged people in the IMU from
attempting to access healthcare at all even in potentially life-threatening situations In order to
see a medical professional people isolated in the IMU must fill out a paper request (a ldquokiterdquo)
and hand it to a correctional officer passing by or report a concern to a nurse who makes
daily rounds passing by each cell in the IMU The medical response happens either ldquocellfrontrdquo
with the person talking to the medical professional through his cell door in earshot of others
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 10 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
held in solitary confinement or ldquoby escortrdquo with the person in handcuffs and leg-cuffs if not
also belly chains and a hood usually accompanied by at least two to four correctional officers
to a medical treatment area Vitamins and over-the-counter medications like Tylenol or as-
needed medications like asthma inhalers are kept outside of the cell and available only at spec-
ified times or again by paper kite request Throughout WADOC people must pay $4 for
non-emergency medical care (unless they are indigent in which case WADOC provides care
without a co-pay) but people held in the IMU have more restrictive caps on their overall
spending for any needs including healthcare food and toiletries proportionally raising the
relative cost of seeking care for non-emergency symptoms
These policies in combination with negative perceptions about the quality of care available
to them dissuaded participants from seeking medical services Deon (Black) described new
and unfamiliar ldquobreathing problemsrdquo and rising ldquoblood pressurerdquo in IMU but felt that seeking
medical attention would be useless
Itrsquos pointless for me to knock on the window and ask the nurse ldquoHey nurse do thisrdquo
Because every time I knock on the windowndashit is pointless because the only thing the DOC
wants is money It is money I think people in the cell should be important And itrsquos a
long time but Irsquod just rather wait till I get out
Later in the interview Deon links his rising blood pressure to his isolation ldquoI never had
blood pressure problems until I went to this IMUrdquo Because Deon does not expect to be treated
with care or dignity he avoids medical treatment As a result his new breathing issues and ris-
ing blood pressure went unnoticed by medical staff and Deon did not find out the cause
Blake (white) described experiencing unfamiliar physical health symptoms in the IMU for
which he was also hopeless about receiving any medical assistance
Irsquove been told I have a heart murmur but for like last two weeks Irsquove been feeling my
heart like feeling weird like it flutters once in a while [I] just donrsquot tell nobody because
they wonrsquot do nothing about it unless yoursquore actually having a heart attack or unless you
declare a medical emergency theyrsquoll pull you out take your vitals and then charge you 4
bucks If I have a heart attack or donrsquot have a heart attack it donrsquot matter
Not only did Blake like Deon doubt whether a prison medical provider would believe him
and try to help him but he was further dissuaded from seeking treatment by the $4 institution-
ally-imposed cost for non-emergency treatment Four dollars is arguably worth much more in
prison that it would be even to a destitute person on the outside and worth more still to some-
one in the IMU Under WADOC policy people in IMU are only allowed to spend $10 per
week on store items such as coffee pastries and deodorant The $4 medical fee would absorb
nearly half of this weekly spending cap Blake might have had clinically insignificant subjective
palpitations or the onset of atrial fibrillation following an undiagnosed myocardial infarction
his confinement status rendered clarification functionally unavailable
Like many other participants Deon and Blake expressed a sense of futility about seeking
medical assistance while in the IMU dissuaded by bureaucratic hurdles from perceived dis-
missiveness and indignity (exemplified in the problem of dual loyalty [67]) to actual costs of
care Futility in turn led to non-evaluation of emerging medical problems Still Deon and
Blake expressed a passive acceptance of their situation ldquoitrsquos pointlessrdquo and ldquoit donrsquot matterrdquo
This hopelessness reflects a precarity unique to solitary confinement wondering whether med-
ications would be provided and refills renewed whether the severity of ailments would be
acknowledged and whether medical emergencies would be addressed or instead treated as
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 11 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
security threats As our participantsrsquo experiences suggest solitary confinement carries the
additional punishment of substandard access to health care
Exacerbating musculoskeletal pain Participants spoke frequently about one specific
chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain The experiences of people in
solitary confinement with chronic musculoskeletal pain reveal how the prior two categories of
symptoms we analyze those associated with deprivation conditions and those associated with
deprivation policies in solitary confinement interact to exacerbate physical health problems
While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical
injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated
and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to
them in solitary confinement
For instance Victor (Latino) described his frustrations with attempts to get care let alone
relief from the pain of his sciatica
Irsquove been told I have nothing wrong with me but I have been hurt and they took x-rays of
my back and they found that the disks are in there or something thatrsquos triggering some
nerves And I still got a little bit of time left and they just opened up an Ibuprofen right
now And that stuff doesnrsquot work So what can you do
Victorrsquos medical file highlights persistence of chronic pain in his back and hips and notes
that he avoided sitting down for longer than 5ndash10 minutes Not only did participants describe
untreated pain but they described the anxiety associated with the lack of treatment Isaac
(BlackLatino) described how he experienced both quad and hamstring pain in the IMU and
how this escalated his physical health concerns ldquoIrsquoll start thinking like oh Irsquom laying in bed
too much Maybe my muscles are starting to rot you know eating on themselvesrdquo In a similar
sentiment Tim (white) stated ldquoMy body is likendashI canrsquot explain it Like my skeleton feels like
my skeletonrsquos broken or somethingrdquo While Victor must bear persistent pain and the anxiety
that he will likely have to continue to suffer Isaac and Timrsquos experiences are more reflective of
somatization or the expression of psychological distress through physical symptoms [69]
These participants highlight the complex comorbidity between musculoskeletal pain and men-
tal health in isolation an inverse experience of physical pain Tyler (white) discussing his sco-
liosis made a direct connection between his untreated pain and his mental health ldquoMental
health and things that go through your head just because of this when you got pain shooting
up into your brain and you guys arenrsquot fixing itrdquo
Pain and anxiety in turn interfered with other aspects of IMU existence Craig (white)
described how an untreated knee injury was causing him ldquomoderate to severe painrdquo in combi-
nation with anxiety about how he would re-enter society when released directly from solitary
confinement together these experiences interfered with his everyday activities including his
ability to communicate with his family ldquoI was in the middle of actually writing my mom a let-
ter and I was going to tell her about you know they still havenrsquot done anything with my
knee I couldnrsquot write the letter anymore I just got so mad I was so mad I really couldnrsquot
even focus on anythingrdquo Craigrsquos medical file affirms his complaint documenting knee swell-
ing and chronic extension tendonitis but also indicating no abnormalities were found
People living in solitary confinement are left with very few options to effectively manage
persistent pain which appears to foster more maladaptive behavior such as rumination stress
and despair within a highly restrictive and stimuli-depleted environment [68ndash71] Along with
bearing the institutional monotony medical precariousness and procedural strictures of soli-
tary confinement onersquos own body becomes a challenge to withstand [72 73]
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 12 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
RacialEthnic disproportionalities
We now turn to reporting the race and ethnic disparities in the Washington state prison popu-
lation overall (compared to the statewide adult population) and in solitary confinement spe-
cifically (compared to the general prison population) These disparities suggest that the
various mechanisms by which solitary confinement impacts health and well-being are likely to
be disproportionately experienced across race and ethnic lines
We analyze administrative data provided by WADOC and Census Bureau population esti-
mates Black non-Latino individuals represented only 37 of adults in Washington state in
2017 but they comprised 179 of the general prison population [74] Similarly Latino indi-
viduals represented 103 of the statewide adult population but 136 of the prison popula-
tion Conversely both White non-Latinos and AsianPacific Islanders Native Americans and
mixed-race individuals (grouped within ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo) were somewhat under-repre-
sented in the general prison population relative to the statewide adult population (see Fig 1)
Differences in racial and ethnic composition of the general prison population and the state-
wide adult population are statistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Within prison walls we find evidence of further racial and ethnic disproportionalities in
housing placement Comparing those housed in restrictive IMU confinement to those housed
in the general population we find that prisoners who self-identify as ldquoLatino Any Racerdquo and
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo ethnicity are over-represented in IMU To characterize the scale of differ-
ences in the racialethnic composition of the IMU and general prison populations we calcu-
lated disproportionality or prevalence ratios as the proportion of each racialethnic group in a
given population divided by the proportion of that racialethnic group in the reference popu-
lation Here Latinos are over-represented within the IMU participant group by a factor of 17
relative to their representation in the general prison population and those grouped in the
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo category are over-represented in the IMU sample by a factor of 26 relative
to the general prison population Conversely White non-Latino individuals are under-repre-
sented in the IMU sample relative to the general prison population Likewise and in contrast
to the gross disproportionality documented in the general prison population Black non-
Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample relative to the gen-
eral prison population 113 of the IMU sample identified as Black non-Latino compared
with 179 of the general prison population The difference in the racial and ethnic composi-
tion of those in long-term solitary confinement compared with the general population was sta-
tistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Discussion
A popular analogy likens prison to a chronic illness it disrupts daily life interrupts routines
[72] spreads risk like a contagious disease [75] and models like an epidemiological problem
[76 30] While the study of the physical effects of incarceration has developed over the last
decade there is a serious gap in the literature in understanding the experiences and outcomes
of physical health in isolation We are just beginning to understand the medical correlates of
solitary confinement their comorbidity with mental health and overall implications for pris-
onersrsquo suffering [72] Integrating surveys interviews BPRS scores medical and disciplinary
file reviews and administrative data the scale and array of our research represents one of the
more robust studies of solitary confinement to date [20] The multi-method research presented
here offers a first step not only towards understanding some typical medical problems of soli-
tary confinement but also towards understanding the analytical challenges of an environment
in which physical and psychological problems are immediately concomitant and objective
clarification is often unavailable
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 13 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Fig 1 Racial and ethnic composition of IMU sample general prison population and Washington State 2017 US Census Bureau
Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and
States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun dagger Authorsrsquo calculations The total prison population file included 17943 individuals in
DOC prison custody on July 1 2017 For comparison purposes the ldquogeneral prison populationrdquo excludes those returned to prison on
violations of release or sentence conditions those in an IMU unit on the index date and those on a maximum custody status (n = 1970)
as well as those in the IMU sample (n = 106) Dagger No significant differences in racialethnic composition were found between the IMU
sample and larger IMU population on the index date using raceethnicity data from DOC These data reflect self-reported raceethnicity
during participant interviews ^ OtherUnknown includes individuals of two or more races AsianPacific Islander Native American
Alaska Native and unknown raceethnicity information
httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510g001
We find that solitary confinement constitutes not just a mental but also a physical health
risk It exacerbates well-documented physical health ldquosymptomsrdquo of incarceration from dis-
ruptions of daily life and routines to undiagnosed untreated or mis-treated ailments [1 30
38] These initial symptoms in turn produce other risks to the extent respondents are accu-
rately reporting weight fluctuations in solitary confinement this physical symptom has detri-
mental health implications weight fluctuation itself is associated with adverse cardiovascular
and psychological outcomes [77 78] Likewise musculoskeletal pain increases multimorbidity
and its sequelae are tightly unified in their impact on disability [79]
These health concerns likely have a grossly disparate impact on communities of color just
as incarceration is a health stratifying institution for prisoners their families and communi-
ties so too does solitary confinement appear to exacerbate racial health inequities While we
find that Black non-Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample
relative to the general prison population we find that Latino and OtherMixed Race prisoners
are disproportionately over-represented in solitary confinement in WADOC just as other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 14 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
studies have documented disproportionately high representations of racial and ethnic minori-
ties in other statesrsquo uses of solitary confinement [22 41 43] We further find that prisoners of
all races describe similar physical health challenges and complaints while in solitary confine-
ment In sum people of color face a disproportionate risk of being placed in solitary confine-
ment such racial disparities in turn mean that the physical health symptoms associated with
or possibly caused by these conditions of confinement are likely to fall disproportionately on
certain groups Though we do not explore other risk factors for over-representation in solitary
confinement in this paper we and others have documented serious mental illness [20 80]
transgender identification [81] and pregnant women [82] as particularly vulnerable to both
incarceration and solitary confinement suggesting additional sub-groups who might face dis-
proportionate and unique risks of physical health problems in solitary confinement
If anything the evidence we present here understates the prevalence and intensity of the symp-
toms we document First Washington State is a progressive system actively engaged in both limit-
ing the application and the duration of solitary confinement and developing measures to mitigate
its harmful effects from better mental health training for correctional staff to more sustained
group contact for prisoners in IMUs conditions and their physical effects are undoubtedly
worse in many if not most other states [20 42 44] Second the BPRS somatic concerns scores
we present focus on the two weeks prior to assessment so likely underrepresent the cumulative
incidence of somatic concerns in the study sample over time Third our exceptionally large ran-
dom sample size for an in-depth mixed methods study of a solitary confinement population was
still not powered to establish statistically significant differences between interview subjects in the
IMU in year one (2017) and those out of the IMU in year two (2018)ndashotherwise important com-
parison groups for understanding differences in either somatic concerns measures or physical
symptom specifications Fourth both the Washington state population and state prison popula-
tion have proportionately more white people than some other states and prisons where racial dis-
parities in both prison and solitary confinement may be even more significant
While our findings do not establish either how prevalent the symptoms and mechanisms of
suffering we specified are among people in solitary confinement as compared to the general
prison population or whether solitary confinement in fact directly causes these symptoms
recent research suggests that at least some of the symptoms our respondents reported like
hypertension are significantly associated with long-term isolation [83 45] Although the evi-
dence is clear that solitary confinement poses serious health risks [54 45] our research high-
lights the importance of continuing to document and analyze these risks especially from a
multi-method perspective triangulating administrative population-level data with objective
scales like the BPRS subjective descriptions of experiences from surveys and interviews and
corroboration from medical file reviews
First documenting physical health problems provides a critical means to elucidate the sever-
ity of deprivations in treatment environmental conditions and exercise and nutrition [84 85]
inherent in solitary confinement If incarceration is experienced fundamentally through control
and restriction of the body this is all the more true in solitary confinement where prisoners are
subjected to extreme forms of control while being entirely reliant on others for accessing basic
necessities from food to healthcare Our participants experienced the deprivations of solitary
confinement as exacerbating their health problems which shaped their health experiences as
punitive Otherwise medically trivial conditions quickly become grave in solitary ldquodandruffrdquo
can become a bleeding scalp wound a four-dollar co-payment blurs the difference between sub-
jective palpitations and an unstable arrhythmia and unused muscles ldquorotrdquo Physical suffering
reveals itself to be a crucial dimension of experience in solitary confinement
Second to the extent physical symptoms in particular are more familiar more readily
labeled and less stigmatized than mental health issues they may provide a window into other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 15 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
less physically tangible pains of confinement in solitary or elsewhere [84 85] The visuality of
spectacular forms of suffering in carceral institutions is only made possible by and through
mundane phenomenon that our participants elucidate through their discussions of everyday
physical experiences [86] Indeed attending to peoplersquos physical health in solitary confinement
reveals the irreducible relationship between the body mental health and highly restrictive
conditions of confinement Whether they exercise to the point of physical debilitation to keep
their minds busy refuse to eat because they do not trust their food is safe or avoid medical
care out of a hopelessness of being treated with dignity the physical and psychological are inti-
mately bounded in peoplersquos experiences in prison Examining physical suffering in solitary
confinement then becomes a tool for understanding suffering in prison more broadly and
especially the comorbidity of physical and mental suffering
Third the challenges we document in identifying and specifying physical symptoms in soli-
tary confinement reveal not just the interrelationship between symptoms conditions and poli-
cies but institutional mechanisms exacerbating both the identification and treatment of
physical problems in prison In many cases our respondents had no hope of establishing what
was physically wrong with them let alone whether the conditions of their confinement caused
the physical ailments because they either could not get or avoided medical treatment While
both community standard and continuity of care is an issue in prison generally [67] solitary
confinement widens these service gaps The phenomenon of dual loyalty which describes how
the patient-provider relationship within prison can be subsumed by correctional directives of
control and mistrust of incarcerated people [67] is acutely relevant in the context of solitary
confinement where both control and mistrust are especially prevalent [87 88]
In sum examining solitary confinement and documenting its affects provides an important
magnifying lens for understanding prison and its affects more broadly not only in elucidating
the mechanisms of harm but also in developing responses to mitigate these harms Ninety-five
percent or more of all prisoners will eventually return home to our communities [4 5] and
many will have spent time in solitary confinement Nearly one-in-five people in prison spends
time in solitary confinement each year and one-in-ten spends 30 days or more in these condi-
tions [3] These numbers will only increase in the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic
which has justified facility-wide ldquolockdownsrdquo imposing restrictions similar to those in soli-
tary-confinement in prisons across the United States as well as actual solitary confinement
placements for infected and exposed prisoners [89] To the extent that solitary confinement
undercuts treatment and care in and beyond prison it undermines the public health of those
incarcerated and those returning to our communities
Supporting information
S1 Text IMU survey
(PDF)
S2 Text Interview instrument
(DOC)
S1 Checklist Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ) 32-item
checklist
(DOCX)
S1 Quotations
(DOCX)
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 16 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Author Contributions
Conceptualization Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter
Formal analysis Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Methodology Justin D Strong Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Project administration Justin D Strong
Writing ndash original draft Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca
Tublitz Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie
Pifer Thomas R Blair
Writing ndash review amp editing Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Dallas Augustine Melissa Bar-
ragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie Pifer Thomas R Blair
References
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4 Administrators Association of State Correctional Administrators Yale Law School Arthur Liman Public
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7 Grassian S Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Wash UJL amp Polrsquoy 2006 22325ndash84
8 Kupers TA What to do with the survivors Coping with the long-term effects of isolated confinement
Crim Justice Behav 2008 Aug 35(8)1005ndash16
9 Griffin E Breaking menrsquos minds Behavior control and human experimentation at the federal prison in
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PLOS ONE The body in isolation
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30 Wildeman C Wang EA Mass incarceration public health and widening inequality in the USA Lancet
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of prison release on HIV diagnoses in the US South PloS one 2018 Jun 11 13(6)e0198258 https
doiorg101371journalpone0198258 PMID 29889837
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nesses J Health Soc Behav 2008 Mar 49(1)56ndash71 httpsdoiorg101177002214650804900105
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Health Disparities 2014 Mar 1 1(1)21ndash8 httpsdoiorg101007s40615-013-0003-1 PMID 24812594
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of health for Black men in the United States Sociol Compass 2018 Mar 12(3)e12566
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ing DC (US) National Institute of Justice 2018 21 p Report No 252062
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42 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States
Am J Public Health 2015 Jan 105(1)18ndash26 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2014302205 PMID 25393185
43 Schlanger M Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial disparities
Mich J Race amp L 2012 18(1)241ndash50
44 Reiter KA Parole snitch or die Californiarsquos supermax prisons and prisoners 1997ndash2007 Punishm
Soc 2012 Dec 14(5)530ndash63
45 Williams BA Li A Ahalt C Coxson P Kahn JG Bibbins-Domingo K The cardiovascular health burdens
of solitary confinement J Gen Intern Med 2019 Oct 1 34(10)1977ndash80 httpsdoiorg101007
s11606-019-05103-6 PMID 31228050
46 Dye MH Deprivation importation and prison suicide combined effects of institutional conditions and
inmate composition J Crim Justice 2010 Jul 1 38(4)796ndash806
47 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S Hadler J Lee D Alper H et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-
harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014 Mar 104(3)442ndash7 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH
2013301742 PMID 24521238
48 Lobel J Akil H Law amp neuroscience The case of solitary confinement Daedalus 2018 Oct1 47(4)61ndash75
49 Zigmond MJ Smeyne RJ Use of animals to study the neurobiological effects of isolation In Lobel J
Smith PS editors Solitary confinement Effects practices and pathways toward reform New York
Oxford University Press 2020 [cited 2020 Jul 14] Chapter 13
50 Stahn AC Gunga HC Kohlberg E Gallinat J Dinges DF Kuhn S Brain changes in response to long
Antarctic expeditions N Engl J Med 2019 Dec 5 381(23)2273ndash5 httpsdoiorg101056
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51 Smith DG Neuroscientists make a case against solitary confinement prolonged social isolation can do
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52 Ranapurwala SI Shanahan ME Alexandridis AA Proescholdbell SK Naumann RB Edwards D Jr
et al Opioid overdose mortality among former North Carolina inmates 2000ndash2015 Am J Public Health
2018 Sep 108(9)1207ndash13 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2018304514 PMID 30024795
53 Wildeman C Andersen LH Solitary confinement placement and post-release mortality risk among for-
merly incarcerated individuals a population-based study Lancet Public Health 2020 Feb 1 5(2)e107ndash
13 httpsdoiorg101016S2468-2667(19)30271-3 PMID 32032555
54 Brinkley-Rubinstein L Sivaraman J Rosen DL Cloud DH Junker G Proescholdbell S et al Associa-
tion of restrictive housing during incarceration with mortality after release JAMA Netw Open 2019 Oct
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abstract2752350 httpsdoiorg101001jamanetworkopen201912516 PMID 31584680
55 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional populations in the United States 2016 Washington DC Depart-
ment of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 14 p Report No NCJ
251211
56 Phipps PA Gagliardi GJ Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and ser-
vices Interim Report Olympia WA Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 May 37 p
Report No 03-05-1901
57 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J of Public Health 2005 Oct 95
(10)1692ndash5
58 Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates Santa Monica CA The
Rand Corporation 1982 Nov Report No N-1635-NIJ
59 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berke-
ley CA University of California Press 2014
60 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up meth-
ods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs 2009 Sep 70
(5)751ndash61 httpsdoiorg1015288jsad200970751 PMID 19737500
61 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach popula-
tion Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2016 May 17 113(20)5477ndash85
62 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation
and normalization in Danish prisons Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
63 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis Thousand
Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
64 Chun Tie Y Birks M Francis K Grounded theory research A design framework for novice researchers
SAGE open medicine 2019 Jan 71ndash8
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65 Berzofsky M and Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) Sample Design Evaluation and Rec-
ommendations Washington DC US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017
66 Nwosu BU Maranda L Berry R Colocino B Flores CD Sr Folkman K et al The vitamin D status of
prison inmates PloS one 2014 Mar 5 9(3)e90623 httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0090623
PMID 24598840
67 Pont J Enggist S Stover H Williams B Greifinger R Wolff H Prison health care governance guaran-
teeing clinical independence American journal of public health 2018 Apr 108(4)472ndash6 httpsdoiorg
102105AJPH2017304248 PMID 29470125
68 Brosschot JF Gerin W Thayer JF The perseverative cognition hypothesis A review of worry pro-
longed stress-related physiological activation and health Journal of psychosomatic research 2006
Feb 1 60(2)113ndash24 httpsdoiorg101016jjpsychores200506074 PMID 16439263
69 Stemmet L Roger D Kuntz J Borrill J Ruminating about the past or ruminating about the futuremdash
which has the bigger impact on health An exploratory study Current Psychology 2018 Jan 13 1ndash7
70 Laws B Crewe B Emotion regulation among male prisoners Theoretical Criminology 2016 Nov 20
(4)529ndash47
71 Greer K Walking an emotional tightrope Managing emotions in a womenrsquos prison Symbolic Interac-
tion 2002 Feb 25(1)117ndash39
72 Choudhry K Armstrong D Dregan A Prisons and Embodiment Self-Management Strategies of an
Incarcerated Population Journal of Correctional Health Care 2019 Oct 25(4)338ndash50 httpsdoiorg
1011771078345819880240 PMID 31722608
73 Western B Homeward Life in the year after prison Russell Sage Foundation 2018 May 4
74 US Census Bureau Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age
Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun
75 Lum K Swarup S Eubank S Hawdon J The contagious nature of imprisonment an agent-based
model to explain racial disparities in incarceration rates Journal of the Royal Society Interface 2014
Sep 6 11(98)20140409
76 Dumont DM Brockmann B Dickman S Alexander N Rich JD Public health and the epidemic of incar-
ceration Annual review of public health 2012 Apr 21 33325ndash39 httpsdoiorg101146annurev-
publhealth-031811-124614 PMID 22224880
77 Zhang Y Hou F Li J Yu H Li L Hu S et al The association between weight fluctuation and all-cause
mortality A systematic review and meta-analysis Medicine 2019 Oct 98(42)
78 Soslashrensen TI Rissanen A Korkeila M Kaprio J Intention to lose weight weight changes and 18-y mor-
tality in overweight individuals without co-morbidities PLoS medicine 2005 Jun 28 2(6)e171 https
doiorg101371journalpmed0020171 PMID 15971946
79 Blyth FM Briggs AM Schneider CH Hoy DG March LM The global burden of musculoskeletal painmdash
where to from here American journal of public health 2019 Jan 01 09(1)35ndash40
80 Patler C Sacha JO Branic N The black box within a black box Solitary confinement practices in a sub-
set of US immigrant detention facilities Journal of Population Research 2018 Dec 354 httpsdoi
org101007s12546-018-9209-8
81 Andasheva F Arenrsquot I a Woman Deconstructing Sex Discrimination and Freeing Transgender Women
from Solitary Confinement FIU L Rev 2016 12117
82 Knittel AK Resolving health disparities for women involved in the criminal justice system North Carolina
medical journal 2019 Nov 01 80(6)363ndash6 httpsdoiorg1018043ncm806363 PMID 31685574
83 Hawkley Test Ashker v Governor of California No 409-cv-05796-CW (ND California 2015)
84 Sexton L Penal subjectivities Developing a theoretical framework for penal consciousness Punish-
ment amp Society 2015 Jan 17(1)114ndash36
85 Crewe B Warr J Bennett P Smith A The emotional geography of prison life Theoretical Criminology
2014 Feb 18(1)56ndash74
86 Corcoran MS Spectacular suffering Transgressive performance in penal activism Theoretical Crimi-
nology 2019 Jan 11 httpsdoiorg1011771362480618819796
87 Glowa-Kollisch S Graves J Dickey N MacDonald R Rosner Z Waters A et al Data- driven human
rights using dual loyalty trainings to promote the care of vulnerable patients in jail Health Hum Rights
2015 Jun 1 17(1)124ndash35
88 Blair TR Reiter KA Letter to the editor and author response Solitary confinement and mental illness
Perspectives 2015 Jul 2
89 Cloud D Augustine D Ahalt C Williams B The ethical use of medical isolationndashnot solitary confine-
mentndashto reduce COVID-19 transmission in correctional settings AMEND 2020 April
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 20 20
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE
See next page
112
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
Psychological Distress in Solitary Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018
Keramet Reiter PhD JD Joseph Ventura PhD David Lovell PhD MSW Dallas Augustine MA Melissa Barragan MA Thomas Blair MD MS Kelsie Chesnut MA Pasha Dashtgard MA EdM Gabriela Gonzalez MA Natalie Pifer PhD JD and Justin Strong MA
Objectives To specify symptoms and measure prevalence of psychological distress among incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement
Methods We gathered data via semistructured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric
Rating Scale (BPRS) assessments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for 106 randomly selected people in solitary confinement in the Washington State
Department of Corrections in 2017 We performed 1-year follow-up interviews
and BPRS assessments with 80 of these incarcerated people and we present the
results of our qualitative content analysis and descriptive statistics Results BPRS results showed clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety or
guilt among half of our research sample Administrative data showed disproportionately
high rates of serious mental illness and self-harming behavior compared with general prison populations Interview content analysis revealed additional symptoms including
social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity Conclusions Our coordinated study of rating scale interview and administrative data
illustrates the public health crisis of solitary confinement Because 95 or more of all incarcerated people including those who experienced solitary confinement are even-tually released understanding disproportionate psychopathology matters for de-veloping prevention policies and addressing the unique needs of people who have
experienced solitary confinement an extreme element of mass incarceration (Am J
Public Health 2020110S56ndashS62 doi102105AJPH2019305375)
few procedural protections limited available alternative responses and no external over-sight2 Researchers and policymakers are therefore limited not only in access to data and populations but also by these populationsrsquo fluidity
A standard instrument for assessing psy-chological impacts of incarceration is the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) Originally developed to rate the severity of symptoms in hospitalized psychiatric patients and track changes in status over time1314 the BPRS is increasingly used for research within carceral settings12151617 The current scale assesses 24 observable or self-reported symptoms Extensive research on the BPRSrsquos reliability and validity confirms its efficacy in identify-ing indicators of serious mental illness14
In Washington State interviewers ad-ministered the BPRS to a random sample of 87 incarcerated people during qualitative interviews (and also conducted 122 medical chart reviews)1915 concluding that solitary confinement reveals ldquoa concentration of some of the most important negative effects of the entire prison complexrdquo1(p1692) In a widely cited subsequent study in Colorado the BPRS was included in a battery of tests designed to measure psychological ldquocon-structsrdquo associated with solitary confinement (for 270 matched participants) but generated
Long-term solitary confinement expanded across the United States in the 1980s by
1997 nearly every state had built a ldquosuper-maxrdquo creating an estimated total of 20 000 new solitary cells12 Human rights agencies characterize the practice as torture34 policy analysts criticize it as expensive and ineffec-tive24 Yet the epidemiological basis for understanding solitary confinement is weak Current estimates of the annual US solitary confinement population vary from 80 000 to 250 00056 Likewise the conditions (how much isolation with how few privileges) purposes (discipline protection or institu-tional security) and labels (administrative segregation supermax restrictive housing intensive management) defining solitary confinement are contested256 Many studies document psychological harms of
S56 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al
segregation including associations between solitary confinement and self-harm anxiety depression paranoia and aggression among other symptoms7ndash9 but other recent find-ings suggest that psychological impacts are limited10ndash12 Correctional officials use solitary confinement at their discretion often with
ABOUT THE AUTHORS Keramet Reiter is with the Department of Criminology Law and Society and the School of Law University of California Irvine Joseph Ventura is with the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles David Lovell is with the School of Nursing University of Washington Seattle Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut and Gabriela Gonzalez are doctoral candidates in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Thomas Blair is with the Department of Psychiatry Southern California Permanente Medical Group Downey Pasha Dashtgard is a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological Science University of California Irvine Natalie Pifer is with the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice University of Rhode Island Kingston Justin Strong is a doctoral student in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine
Correspondence should be sent to Keramet Reiter 3373 Social Ecology II Irvine CA 92697 (e-mail reiterkuciedu) Reprints can be ordered at httpwwwajphorg by clicking the ldquoReprintsrdquo link
This article was accepted September 5 2019 doi 102105AJPH2019305375
AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
few reliable results The study relied on a pencil-and-paper test the Brief Symptom Inventory ldquoa 53-item self-report measure to assess a broad range of psychological symptomsrdquo and concluded that people in solitary confinement sometimes experienced improvements in their psychological well-being and those with mental illnesses did not deteriorate over time11(p52)
Our study builds on these investigations relying not only on psychometric instruments but also on mental and physical health and dis-ciplinary records and in-depth interview data to assess the psychological well-being of 106 ran-domly sampled incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections (WADOC) from 2017 to 2018 Triangulation of sources gives this study a robust basis for understanding the psy-chological effects of solitary confinement
METHODS WADOC is a midsized (39th highest rate
of incarceration in the United States) fully state-funded correctional system with a long history of inviting academic researchers to independently evaluate carceral practice191819
Fieldwork was conducted over 2 separate 3-week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team mem-bers (9 women and 4 men) all affiliated with the University of California Irvine In total 106 incarcerated people were inter-viewed in 2017 and 80 incarcerated people were reinterviewed in 2018 We also collected medical and disciplinary data including serious mental illness (SMI) and self-harm data
Sample and Data Collections WADOC has 5 geographically dispersed
intensive management units (IMUs) people in these all-male units have usually violated an in-prison rule and are in solitary confinement for durations ranging from months to years with highly restricted access to phones radios televisions time out of cell and visitors As a result of WADOC efforts to reform and re-duce IMU use the population in these units fluctuated with a high of more than 600 (in 2011) to a low of 286 incarcerated people (in 2015) on ldquomaximum custodyrdquo status for indeterminate terms contingent on meeting
specific benchmarks20 In 2017 when the initial sample for this research was drawn there were 363 maximum custody status people assigned to the IMU
We selected participants from a randomly ordered list in proportion to the population of each IMU accounting for 29 of the total population in each of the 5 units For recruitment and consent processes see Ap-pendix A (available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg) The interview refusal rate was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people921
The 96-question semistructured interview instrument included a range of questions used in previous studies on incarcerated peoplersquos experiences2223 covering condi-tions of daily life physical and mental health treatment and IMU programming BPRS self-report items were embedded throughout the interview we evaluated observational items immediately following each in-terview24 Interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 3 hours
Following interviews participants were given an option to consent to medical file reviews and to participate in 1-year follow-up interviews All participants consented to rein-terviews and all but 2 participants (n = 104) consented to medical file reviews Following year-1 interviews WADOC provided elec-tronic administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants (along with comparable population-level data for the prison system in 2017)
In summer 2018 the research team returned to Washington and reconsented and reinterviewed every available participant mdashnotably including those no longer housed in the IMUmdashfor a total of 80 reinterviews Because of refusals (n = 4) institutional trans-fers and parole (n = 21) and 1 death we were unable to follow-up with 26 respondents (25) This drop-out rate is low compared with similar studies2526 Follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 2 hours The condensed year-2 instrument contained ap-proximately 70 questions with variation by current housing status
For the steps taken to protect vulnerable imprisoned research participants and details of the training research team members com-pleted establishing high interrater reliability in administering the BPRS24 see Appendix A
(available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg)
Data Analysis All interviews were assigned a randomly
generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed in Microsoft Word (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details (names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software De-velopment GmbH Berlin Germany) for analysis See Appendix A for an explanation of the thematically grounded open-coding process27 We entered all BPRS paper rating sheets completed following year-1 and year-2 interviews into Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) We linked each participantrsquos BPRS rating by random identifier to extracted data from qualitative interviews medical file reviews and administrative data from WADOC
Relevant variables extracted from ad-ministrative health data included SMI a critical classification because it implies that treatment is medically necessary and there-fore is an obligation of the prison system while the person is under its care WADOC operationally defines SMI by standardized criteria combining diagnosis medication and frequency of psychiatric encounters and history of suicide attempts or other self-harm
We then imported BPRS and other administrative data into SPSS version 26 (IBM Armonk NY) to generate descriptive statistics including prevalence of clinically significant ratings on BPRS items and factors (subscales of co-occurring symptom groups) including positive symptoms (un-usual thought content hallucinations con-ceptual disorganization) negative symptoms (blunted affect emotional withdrawal motor retardation) depression-anxiety-guilt symptoms (including somatic concerns DAGS) and mania (excitability elevated mood hyperactivity distractibility)14 We ran correlational analyses (cross-tabs and t test) to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings and other independent assess-ments of well-being such as existing diagnosis of SMI
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S57
mdash
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
RESULTS See Table 1 for summary characteristics of
the all-male participant population (there are
TABLE 1 Characteristics of Sample of People in Solitary Confinement Compared With General Prison Population Washington State Department of Corrections 2017
no women in IMUs in WADOC) and the IMU Population (n = 106) General Population (n = 16 465)a
general WADOC population As in other Age y studies of solitarily confined incarcerated Mean 35 40 people6 our sample was generally younger Median 34 38 more violent (in terms of criminal history) and Range 20ndash65 18ndash94 serving longer sentences than those in the general population Latinos and gang affiliates are both overrepresented in our IMU sample likely because of the salience of conflicts among rival Latino factions as an institutional security concern2 Although our IMU par-ticipants differed from the general prison population there were no significant differences in either demographic variables or criminal history characteristics between our random
Raceethnicity (no)
White
African American
Latino
Other
IMU length of stay
Mean
Median
Range
42 (44)
12 (12)
23 (24)
23 (24)
145 mo
6 mo
lt 1 wkndash151 mo
59 (9746)
18 (2935)
14 (2276)
9 (1508)
sample and the overall IMU population Current offense category (no)
except that our participant pool was slightly Murder and manslaughter 17 (18) 16 (2623)
older than the overall IMU population Sex offenses 12 (13) 19 (3195)
Robbery and assault 57 (60) 34 (5608)
Property offenses 8 (9) 18 (2933) Range and Prevalence of Drugs or other 6 (6) 13 (2106)
Psychological Symptoms Identified Prison convictionsb
Our initial sample of 106 participants had a Mean 5 4 mean BPRS rating of 37 and a median rating Median 4 3 of 33 (possible range from 24 to 168) sug- Range 1ndash18 1ndash27 gesting mild psychiatric symptoms among the study population at the time of our inter-views14 However analysis of individual scale items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms (Table 2) Further analysis of BPRS factors as opposed to individual items provided
Prison length of stay mo
Mean
Median
Range
Ever in prison gangc (no)
Yes
No
Missing
103
72
3ndash456
60 (64)
36 (38)
4 (4)
97
45
2ndash600
32 (5410)
68 (11 659)
additional evidence of clinically significant Serious mental illnessd (no) 19 (16) 9 (1589)
psychiatric distress in as much as half of the Self-harm attempte (no) 18 (17) Not available population sampled (ie DAGS factor Suicide attempte (no) 22 (22) Not available Table 2)
Administrative data support the finding Note IMU = intensive management unit
of long-term psychological distress Among aGeneral population data excludes 761 categories returned to prison for techn
nonsentenced and 718 resentencical violations of conditions on un
ed incarcerated people Both derlying drug or sex offenses
our respondents 19 had SMI designations a politically selective and narrow set of offenses that would distort the general population primary
22 had a documented suicide attempt and offense profile
18 had documentation of other self-harm bNumber of convictions to prison excluding out-of-state convictions often significant for IMU residents
all at some point during their incarceration cGang status was self-reported Figure is calculated from 102 respondents
ided for 85 respondents figure i
who disclosed this information
either before or during their time in the IMU dSerious mental illness data were prov s calculated from this sample
(Table 1) Moreover respondents with SMI eSelf-harm and suicide data were provided for 94 respondents figure is calculated from this sample
designations were much more likely to re-port positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms Qualitative interview data revealed and will be considered exhaustively in sub-than non-SMI respondents (Table 3) These symptoms not otherwise captured by the sequent analyses) Two classes of symptoms
ndentsfindings support the validity of the BPRS BPRS and medical files (Such data will be were reported by a majority of respoassessments used illustratively here for reasons of space descriptions of the severity of the emotional
S58 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
mdash
ndash
mdash
ndash
TABLE 2 Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Symptom and Factor Prevalence Washington State Department of Corrections 2017 2018
IMU 2017 (n = 106) (No) IMU 2018 (n = 28) (No) Non-IMU 2018 (n = 52) (No)
Symptomsa
Depression 2450 (26)
Anxiety 2450 (26)
Somatic concern 1510 (16)
Guilt 1790 (19)
Hostility 1130 (12)
Hallucinations 940 (10)
Excitement 1040 (11)
2500 (7) 1538 (8)
3214 (9) 2885 (15)
2143 (6) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 1731 (9)
1429 (4) 1154 (6)
1429 (4) 769 (4)
Factorsb
Positive 1600 (17) 1786 (5) 1154 (6) stitution taking over their identity
Negative 470 (5) 0 (0) 192 (1) Irsquove been in the hole so long that it defines the DAGS 4910 (52) 5357 (15) 3654 (19) person If yoursquove been in the box for so long you Mania 1700 (18) 1481 (4) 1731 (9) canrsquot play well with others Wersquore so confined
Note DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization IMU = intensive management unit in that box Itrsquos like a safety blanket (Eli)
mania = elevated memotional withdrawal and motor retarand conceptual disorganization aOnly clinically significant symptoms (raof the sample are presented
ood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement dation positive = hallucinations unu
ting of 4 or higher) that were repor
negative = blunted affect sual thought content
ted by 10 or more
Another respondent echoed a frequent complaint about the lack of mirrors con-tributing to the loss of identity
bFactors combine 3
toll of being in the cumulatively the times) and feeling
or 4 different symptoms that are
IMU (80 of respondents topic was mentioned 359 s of social isolation (73
commonly associated
And this quotatiisolation
Yoursquore not around
with one another14
on exemplifies social
people Irsquom around
This IMU has mirrors in the cell The majority of them do not And it gets really stressful when you canrsquot even see your own reflection I mean when you canrsquot even look at yourself you lose some of your self-identity (Eric)
of respondents cmentioned 192 ticerpt exemplifies descriptions
I bet you couldnrsquot the stuff you got tpain Therersquos a lo[and] Irsquove been doadapt to their surrthis life I donrsquot [tpseudonym as wi
TABLE 3 SerioPrevalence Was
Positive
Negative
DAGS
umulatively the t
the ldquoemotional t
walk in my shoes beo endure behind these walls of t you got to go through ing this for 11 years oundings but to get hink] you can (Michth all subsequent qu
us Mental Illness Shington State De
SMI (n
opic was mes) This interview ex-
ollrdquo
cause all
people used to ael a otations)
tatus and 20partment of
= 16) (No
50 (8)
630 (1)
5630 (9)
somebody right noand shackles on like dehumanizing No human being I feel land it does have an while yoursquore sitting
Two additional alent as other clinicitems like anxiety hypersensitivity (16
17 Brief Psychiatric
)
w with handcuffs Irsquom an animal Itrsquos human contact As [a] ike wersquore meant to socialize effect on your mentality in the cell (Chase)
symptoms were as prev-ally significant BPRS references to sensory of respondents
Rating Scale Factor Corrections 2017 2018
Non-SMI (n = 69) (No
1014 (7)
440 (3)
4780 (33)
Comparing Symptoms in and out of Solitary Confinement (2018)
Of the 80 respondents reinterviewed in the second year of this study 28 were in IMU custody and 52 were in the general prison population These 2 subpopulations provide important comparison groups between IMU residents and people in the general popula-tion because all initially entered the study through a random sample of IMU residents These subpopulations also provide a longi-tudinal view of how incarcerated people experience IMU conditions over 1 year and how they recover from these conditions ) as they re-enter the general population In Table 2 we compare cumulatively by sub-population symptom and factor scores in 2017 for IMU residents to 2018 scores for
Mania
Populationa
Note DAGS = deprehyperactivity and excitement negative positive = hallucinatmental illness aMental health data
ssion anxiety guilt
1875 (3)
1880 (16)
= blunted affeht content anions unusual thoug
were available only for 85 of 10
and somatization mania = elevated mct emotional withdrawd conceptual disorgan
13 (9)
8120 (69)
ood distractibility motor al and motor retardation ization SMI = serious
6 sampled incarcerated people
IMU respondents and respondents not in the IMU For respondents still in the IMU in 2018 all clinically significant symptoms that were prevalent among at least 10 of the pop-ulation were at least as prevalent in 2018 and 2 clinically significant factor scores were more prevalent (positive DAGS) For respondents
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S59
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Respondents discussed hy-persensitivity to sounds smells ldquo[and ] tiny thingsrdquo (Giovanni) In particular the sounds of doors opening and closing aggravated many respondents
All you got to do is hold it I mean you donrsquot got to slam it Itrsquos like [correctional officers] showing their power That ainrsquot cool You wouldnrsquot do that in your house would you (Tyler)
Respondents also talked about the in-
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
not in the IMU in 2018 the prevalence of clinically significant symptoms varied from more prevalent than in the 2017 sample (eg anxiety) to less prevalent (eg somatic con-cerns and guilt) and factor scores were either lower (ie positive negative DAGS) or similar (for mania) for respondents not in the IMU in 2018 Despite having an excep-tionally large sample size for a study of a solitary confinement population our study was not powered to establish statistically significant dif-ferences between the 2017 and 2018 data sets
DISCUSSION In this study we combined qualitative
interview data with structured quantitative measures of psychological and psychiatric outcomes in solitary confinement among 106 randomly sampled incarcerated people in Washington State documenting both a wide range and high prevalence of symptoms of psychological distress We highlight 4 major implications of this
First while the overall BPRS ratings we analyzed indicated limited psychological distress as documented in earlier studies1112
a closer examination of specific items and factors revealed that as many as half of re-spondents had at least 1 clinically significant symptom within the BPRS anxietyndashdepression factor Because other studies using the BPRS in solitary confinement settings employed earlier 18-item versions of the scale15 used the scale in combination with other scales11 or analyzed only total ratings12 our findings are not directly comparable with those in other BPRS studies However our findings are consistent with other studies including findings that 20 or more of Washington incarcerated people in solitary exhibited a ldquomarked or severe degree of distressrdquo15(p774) and that more than half of California incarcerated people in soli-tary reported ldquosymptoms of psychological distressrdquo28(p133) Our findings therefore high-light the importance of analyzing specific components of BPRS scores and not only aggregates which mask variation in both prevalence and severity of specific symptoms
Second administrative data confirmed that our participants had relatively high rates of documented mental health problems including rates of SMI and self-harming behavior (Table 1) SMI rates typically
estimated at 10 to 15 of prison pop-ulations829 are measured at 9 in Wash-ingtonrsquos general prison population but 20 in our IMU sample Likewise our qualitative data confirmed that people in solitary con-finement experience symptoms specific to those conditions not captured in standard psychiatric assessment instruments30 Both findings suggest an affirmative answer to the question of whether solitary confinement is associated with more and worse psycho-pathology than general population confine-ment As longitudinal case studies have illustrated930 disproportionate representa-tion of incarcerated people with psychopa-thology in solitary confinement reflects the interaction of clinical and security factors in prison custody decisions solitary confine-ment responds to behavior expressing psy-chopathology often undiagnosed and also aggravates the propensity of some incarcer-ated people to break down or act out31 For these reasons the causal role of solitary confinement is not established by aggre-gate comparisons of IMU and non-IMU populations
Third the comparisons we were able to make across multiple sources of data allowed us to identify a broader range of symptoms of distress than studies that have focused on only 1 or 2 sources of data such as administrative data8 psychiatric assessments11 or qualitative interviews2830 Symptoms such as anxiety and depression were especially prevalent in this population along with symptoms os-tensibly specific to solitary confinement such as sensory hypersensitivity and a perceived loss of identity (as found in other studies exploring solitary-specific symptoms7915283032)
Finally consistent with previous studies1112
we found that the prevalence of psychiatric distress did not significantly increase over time for incarcerated people that either stay or are released from the IMU 1 year later Yet our qualitative data suggest that the BPRS may not be capturing actual psychopathology as re-spondents pointed to psychiatric distressmdashin profoundly existential terms as in the pre-viously mentioned quotations regarding selfhood and identitymdashbeyond the 2-week time period evaluated by the BPRS and outside the scope of the instrument More-over although symptoms were not cumula-tively found to worsen they did persist at high rates for incarcerated people in and out of the
IMU in 1-year follow-up assessments These latter findings are also consistent with other studies underscoring the need for additional research comparing incarcerated peoplersquos ex-periences across different contexts and over time17152832
Limitations Five specific limitations are especially
notable First although our initial sample was relatively large for a solitary confinement population our 1-year follow-up group especially the number of respondents remaining in solitary confinement in the second year was relatively small limiting our ability to establish statistically significant findings about change over time and across contexts from BPRS data Second as our interview results revealed the BPRS does not capture the full spectrum of psychiatric distress incarcerated people experience in solitary confinement Third assessments of psycho-logical well-being would ideally occur at multiple times beyond the 2 we were able to conduct within the constraints of this mul-timethod study Fourth Washington State is not representative of most state prison systems in terms of the prevalence of people with mental illnesses in solitary confinement as WADOC has undertaken reforms in both treatment of mental illness and imposition of solitary confinement over the past 20 years including reforms designed to divert people with serious mental illness to specialized treatment units33 Moreover these reforms have radically improved systematic mental health record-keeping we would expect not only a lower prevalence of psychiatric symp-toms and less deterioration in WADOC in IMUs but also a higher rate of documentation of those symptoms that are present Finally although people in solitary confinement may exhibit distinctive or disproportionately severe psychopathology causal inference regarding the relationship between solitary confinement and psychopathology is beyond the analysis we are able to perform here
Conclusions and Implications We found a wide range and high preva-
lence of symptoms of psychiatric distress in this population including BPRS symptoms associated with anxiety and depression among
S60 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
as many as half of our participants adminis-trative indicators of SMI among at least one fifth of our participants and condition-specific symptoms such as feelings of extreme social isolation in well more than half of our participants Moreover these symptoms persisted in the second year for participants in and out of solitary confinement
If we study people in solitary confinement solely with instruments validated with non-incarcerated populations such as the BPRS we may fail to capture the extent of incare-cerated peoplersquos psychological distress A re-spondentrsquos rating on a given symptom may not be ldquohigh enoughrdquo symptoms may not be experienced within the instrumentrsquos desig-nated time frame or the discursive strategies incarcerated people use to articulate their suffering might not correspond with clinical language Moreover past research reveals that incarcerated people develop coping mecha-nisms for solitary1232 and these along with the fact that speaking openly about psycho-logical distress conflicts with institutional norms of self-protection in prison1230 likely contribute to a systematic underreporting of distress These are critical limitations of standardized assessments of incarcerated people whose symptoms may fluctuate sub-stantially in presence and severity during time in solitary1732 Apart from symptoms or their severity this fluctuation itself is an integral aspect of incarcerated peoplersquos psychological distress34 but a need for repeated measure-ment makes it especially difficult to capture
Our findings still point to the importance of using standardized instruments which provide a baseline for assessing and inter-preting the psychological effects of solitary confinement Nonetheless additional sources of evidencemdashinterviews clinician observa-tions staff observations medical filesmdashare crucial for capturing the range of symptoms that people in solitary exhibit and those symptomsrsquo prevalence duration and severity over time Without the benefit of mixed methods and improved instruments re-searchers and policymakers alike will con-tinue not only to lack desired data but also to not know what data we lack Increasing the transparency of both conditions of con-finement and the associated health effects is critical to both question formulation and data gathering
As 5 to 15 of the United Statesrsquo 16 million incarcerated people are held in solitary confinement for at least part of their incar-ceration56 and virtually all of those people will be released all members of society have a vested interest in limiting the induction of psychopathology suggested by findings such as those presented here At least some of the symptoms we described here including identity loss and hypersensitivity resulted directly from specific conditions of confine-ment such as the absence of mirrors and the repetitive slamming of doors To the extent that solitary is meant to make people more manageable its association with psychopa-thology calls into question its usefulness let alone its justice And to the extent that solitary confinement has any causative role in psychopathology our collective goal should be prevention
CONTRIBUTORS K Reiter served as principal investigator on this study led data collection and analysis and conceptualized and led the writing of this article J Ventura trained the study team in applying the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) consulted on data collection and analysis and participated in writing this article D Lovell consulted on study design and data collection led the analysis of administrative data and participated in writing this article D Augustine M Barragan K Chesnut P Dashtgard G Gonzalez N Pifer and J Strong participated in project design participant interviews data analysis and writing of this article K Chesnut also served as project manager and with P Dashtgard participated in administrative data and BPRS analysis T Blair consulted on data analysis and participated in writing this article
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Funding for this research was provided by the Langeloth Foundation
The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Alyssa Cisneros Emma Conner and Rosa Greenbaum contributed to study design interviewed participants and analyzed data for this project Leida Rojas Elena Amaya and Keely Blissmer helped to clean and organize data Rebecca Tublitz analyzed administrative data Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor Multiple anonymous reviewers provided detailed critical feedback that improved this piece significantly Finally the incarcerated people who shared their experiences with us made this study possible
Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
HUMAN PARTICIPANT PROTECTION This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
REFERENCES 1 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J Public Health 200595(10)1692ndash1695
2 Reiter K 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016
3 United Nations Solitary confinement should be banned in most cases UN expert says UN News Centre October 18 2011 Available at httpsnewsunorgen story201110392012-solitary-confinement-should-be-banned-most-cases-un-expert-says Accessed October 22 2019
4 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States Am J Public Health 2015105(1)18ndash26
5 Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program Yale Law School Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms Nov 2016 Available at https lawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterliman documentaimingtoreduceticpdf Accessed April 23 2019
6 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 Bureau of Justice Statistics 2015 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112 pdf Accessed April 23 2019
7 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary con-finement a systematic critique Crime Justice 201847(1) 365ndash416
8 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014104(3)442ndash447
9 Lovell D Patterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prison Crim Justice Behav 200835(8)985ndash1004
10 Morgan RD Smith P Labrecque RM et al Quantitative syntheses of the effects of administrative segregation on inmatesrsquo well-being Psychol Public Policy Law 201622(4)439ndash461
11 OrsquoKeefe ML Klebe KJ Metzner J Dvoskin J Fellner J Stucker A A longitudinal study of adminis-trative segregation J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 2013 41(1) 49ndash60
12 Walters GD Checking the math do restrictive housing and mental health need add up to psychologi-cal deterioration Crim Justice Behav 201845(9)1347ndash1362
13 Overall JE Gorham DR The brief psychiatric rating scale Psychol Rep 196210(3)799ndash812
14 Ventura J Nuechterlein KH Subotnik KL Gutkind D Gilbert EA Symptom dimensions in recent-onset schizophrenia and mania a principal components analysis of the 24-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Psychiatry Res 200097(2-3)129ndash135
15 Cloyes KG Lovell D Allen DG Rhodes LA Assessment of psychosocial impairment in super-maximum security unit sample Crim Justice Behav 200633(6)760ndash781
16 Hassan L Birmingham L Harty MA et al Prospective cohort study of mental health during imprisonment Br J Psychiatry 2011198(1)37ndash42
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S61
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
17 Senior J Birmingham L Harty MA et al Identifi-cation and management of prisoners with severe psy-chiatric illness by specialist mental health services Psychol Med 201343(7)1511ndash1520
18 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121 US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfcpus16pdf Accessed April 23 2019
19 Phipps P Gagliardi G Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and services interim report Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 Available at httpwwwwsippwagov ReportFile836Wsipp_Washingtons-Dangerous-Mentally-Ill-Offender-Law-Program-Selection-and-Services-Interim-Report_Full-Reportpdf Accessed April 23 2019
20 Neyfakh L What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate April 2015 Available at httpsslatecom news-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml Accessed April 23 2019
21 Berzofsky M Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recom-mendations US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017 Available at httpswwwbjsgov contentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf Accessed April 23 2019
22 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014
23 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism isolation and normalization in Danish prisons Punishm Soc 2017 20(1)92ndash112
24 Ventura J Lukoff D Nuechterlein KH Liberman RP Green MF Shaner A Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) expanded version (40) scales anchor points and administration manual Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 19933227ndash244
25 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples J Stud Alcohol Drugs 200970(5)751ndash761
26 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study re-tention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2016113(20)5477ndash5485
27 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
28 Haney C Mental health issues in long-term solitary and ldquosupermaxrdquo confinement Crime Delinq 200349(1) 124ndash156
29 James DJ Glaze LE Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates Washington DC Bureau of Justice Statistics 2006
30 Toch H Adams K Acting Out Maladaptation in Prisons Washington DC American Psychological Asso-ciation 2002
31 Reiter K Blair T Superlative subjects institutional futility and the limits of punishment Berkeley J Criminal Law 201823(2)162ndash193
32 Rhodes L Total Confinement Madness and Reason in a Maximum Security Prison Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004
33 Guy A Locked up and locked down segregation of inmates with mental illness 2015 Disability Rights Washington Available at httpswww disabilityrightswaorgwp-contentuploads201712 LockedUpandLockedDown_September2016pdf Accessed April 23 2019
34 Reiter K Koenig KA Extreme Punishment Compar-ative Studies in Detention Incarceration and Solitary Con-finement New York NY Palgrave MacMillan 2015
S62 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
Appendix A Additional Methods Details
Protecting Vulnerable Populations
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all
information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To recruit participants a research team member approached each
prisoner at his cell-front explained the study and invited him to interview Willing prisoners
were escorted singly to a confidential area (monitored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff)
consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research team
All identifiable data collected for this project including interview audio recordings
transcripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office or in a secure server space accessible only through multi-
factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data cleaning and linking
The University of California IRB approved this study as did the WADOC research department
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Training and Application
At the conclusion of each interview in both year one and year two interviewers
completed ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items For self-report questions interviewers asked
about the presence of symptoms in the previous two weeks per BPRS standard26 The research
team completed 16 hours of in-person structured symptom assessment training sessions with an
expert in BPRS research (co-author Ventura) prior to the year-one interviews and completed
four hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews for a total of 20 hours of
training26 Using a set of seven standardized BPRS training videos of patient interviews the
research team viewed and rated each video and discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold
Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for interrater reliability All research team
members met the minimum standard of an ICC=80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years 2017
and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment team
when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the standard
training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings
Coding Process
To develop our codebook six team members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-
line27 generating an initial list of over 500 codes These codes were further refined and
categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 10 code groups After a round of
pilot coding in which each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one re-
coding coding discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of
interest such as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months
to resolve discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were
calculated for intercoder agreement
WADOC Disclosures
The research presented here utilizes a confidential Data File from the Department of
Corrections (DOC) located within the Washington Department of Corrections The views
expressed here are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the DOC or
other Data File contributors Any errors are attributable to the author(s)
(2) PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull DOC has implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals (1) reducing the
number of people in restrictive housing (2) reducing the length of time individuals spend
in restrictive housing and (3) mitigating the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive
housing Over the 2010s DOC has indeed made improvements in all three areas
bull The number of people on maximum custody status in IMUs across the state has
fluctuated from a low of 149 (in 2002) to a peak of 472 (in 2011) By 2014 reforms had
cut this peak population nearly in half to 283 But the population increased again by
more than 20 percent over the next three years rising back to 342 in 2017
bull While IMU populations have fluctuated mean lengths of stay in IMUs (for those at all
custody statuses) have decreased steadily since 2011 maximum custody prisoners now
spend an average of 214 days in IMUs 133 days less than in 2011
bull Although mean lengths of stay in the IMU fell significantly after 2011 an increasing proportion of people experience IMU confinement across snapshots and cumulative
time spent in the IMU increased steadily between 2002 and 2017
bull Both Hispanic prisoners and Hispanic-affiliated gang members are increasingly over-represented in the max custody-IMU population relative to their representation in the
general prison population over the 2002-2017 period
(3) CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull The IMUs function with less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than they did two decades ago as described by staff and seen in comparison with data
Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago
bull Access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of programming has increased
bull People are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons and receive regular
individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement
bull Those prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods represent
substantial management challenges (eg histories of repeated attacks on staff or of
serious mental illness) Washington DOC officials are national leaders in piloting
alternatives
5
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Staff participated eagerly and thoughtfully in interviews and repeatedly expressed
gratitude for the opportunity to both have a voice in policy evaluations and reflect on the intensity of their work in the IMU
bull IMU Staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their
colleagues and with immediate supervisors nearly 90 percent of correctional officers
surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unitrdquo for instance
bull Although staff felt safe working in the IMU they overwhelmingly felt hypervigilant (often even unsafe) outside of prison suggesting that their work in the IMU had health
and social consequences outside of the IMU
bull Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them from
ldquoheadquartersrdquo they desired more opportunities for input into policymaking
especially around safety and security needs and risks
bull Staff described specific objections to reforms (1) prioritization of prisoner well-being
over staff well-being (2) violation of mandates to be fair and consistent through
individualized accommodations and treatment plans for prisoners and (3) imposition of
extra burdens on staff (especially around additional movement of prisoners into more
programs) causing stress about fulfilling obligations and anxieties about safety
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food and care and
perceived staff as responsive to requests kites and grievances
bull Prisoners consistently expressed frustration with the long waitlists for classes and
programs waitlists which extended the durations of their IMU placements
bull Prisoners appreciated the good-faith efforts being made around programming in the
IMU but found many of the programs to be repetitive futile and not tailored to their
specific challenges and needs
bull Prisoners found social contact policies (who could visit) and practical barriers (phone
access and geographic distance) in the IMU frustrating and harmful to their well-being
6
bull Prisoners in the IMU frequently experienced clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety and guilt serious mental illness and self-harming behavior IMU-
induced symptoms of social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity
skin irritations and weight fluctuations un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
and musculoskeletal pain
bull Prisoners in the IMU were often just trying to make it through but upon release back
into the general prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and
physical challenges experienced while in the IMU
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Maintain long-standing commitment to systematically collecting robust data about
DOC policy and practice and collaboratively sharing and analyzing this data with
external independent researchers
PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull Continue to carefully track all forms of restrictive housing use including number of
people confined rates of confinement average and cumulative lengths of stay and
the over-representation of Hispanic prisoners
bull Continue work to reduce overall restrictive housing populations but also the
frequency with which people experience these conditions lengths of stay in these
conditions and disparate impact of these conditions on Hispanic prisoners
bull The racial disproportionality in IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories and suggests an
area ripe for further policy attention
CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Continue work to mitigate the harms of restrictive housing including provision of
counseling healthcare group activities and programs and individualized
assessments of placement decisions
7
STAFF EXPERIENCES
bull Seek out and integrate IMU staff perspectives into reform initiatives
bull Provide regular opportunities for staff to reflect on the challenges of work in the
IMU (with supervisors counselors and researchers)
bull Develop resources to address the unique stress of being hypervigilant outside of the
IMU
PRISONER EXPERIENCES
bull Shorten wait times to participate in IMU programs
bull Leverage existing programming infrastructure (personnel classrooms) to develop
more substantively useful content for IMU prisoners
bull Continue to develop and support social contact for IMU prisoners
bull Address and mitigate the ongoing physical and mental harms associated with IMU
placements especially by reducing barriers to accessing healthcare and improving
the quality of treatment
COMMITMENT TO REFORM
bull Maintain the Mission Housing Administrator position which is focused on
implementing restrictive housing reform
bull Consider implementing similar ldquomission housingrdquo positions at the institutional level
to facilitate ongoing individualized attention to address the intersection of health
and behavioral challenges among the highest security prisoners in the most
restrictive conditions of confinement
bull Develop state-level agreements to permit transfer of seriously mentally ill prisoners
from custody-oriented facilities to healthcare-oriented facilities
8
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT
The project at the broadest level sought to understand Washington Statersquos widely touted
reduction in solitary confinement use at both the level of quantitative administrative data and
at the level of lived experience for prisoners and staff The core claim in 2013 Washington had
reduced their solitary confinement population by more than half and implemented additional
reforms to shorten terms in segregation refocus on rehabilitation reframe responses to self-
harming prisoners and systematically intervene in prison-based violence through programs like
Operation Place Safety1 We started this project with two key questions
(1) What policies has Washington State implemented to reduce its reliance on restrictive
housing
(2) What are the impacts ndash on both prisoners and staff ndash of Washington statersquos restrictive
housing reduction program
To answer these questions we
bull Analyzed 15 years of administrative data six record sets of the entire DOC population
on evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and 2017)
including subject-level demographic records (N=57130) event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments
(12 million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million)
bull Administered paper surveys to prisoners on maximum custody status living in and staff
working in IMUs totaling 225 paper surveys collected from prisoners and 90 from
custody and non-custody staff
bull Conducted in-depth qualitative interviews (1) 106 interviews with a random sample of
maximum custody prisoners housed across all five of DOCrsquos IMUs in the summer of
2017 (2) 80 one-year follow-up interviews with 2017 participants still incarcerated in
the summer of 2018 (3) 77 interviews with a strategic convenience sample of custody
and non-custody staff working in and supervising IMUs in the summer of 2017
1 See Bernie Warner Dan Pacholke and Carly Kujath Operation Place Safety First Year in Review Jun 1 2014 (Washington State Department of Corrections) available online at httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
9
bull Collected DOC policies and reports about restrictive housing reform in the 2000s
conducted dozens of informal conversations with former DOC leadership to identify
policy changes and goals and observed multiple classification committee meetings
during visits to Washington state to administer surveys and conduct interviews
During both our survey administration and qualitative interview data collection phases we
worked with the Mission Housing Administrator to bring 8-9 research staff on site over multiple
days at each IMU in the state in 2017 and then at each prison housing year-one research
participants in 2018 At each institution staff worked with each other and the Mission Housing
Administrator to figure out how to move prisoners into secure interview rooms on and off
IMUs The cooperation was phenomenal and across hundreds of hours of interviews our
research staff uniformly felt comfortable and safe This project unprecedented in
While this report reviews in great detail preliminary scope and scale relied on findings from analyses of both interviews and Washington State DOCrsquos administrative data a broader implication of this partnership commitment to
extended partnership deserves acknowledging at the transparency and vision for reform
outset What Washington leadership at headquarters
and in the Research Department facilitated with this project is unprecedented in scope and
scale in prison research in the United States In facilitating this work Washington DOC has first
extended and amplified its reputation as a sought-after partner in research-practitioner
collaborations building on the collaborations between DOC and the University of Washington
in the late 1990s and early 2000s around mental health and solitary confinement And
Washington DOC has second proven that research like this is eminently possible The critical
insights here would not have been possible to discern without the bigger picture investments in
transparency and improvement to which Washington DOC is committed While prisoners staff
and administrative data itself point the way to possible policy recommendations to improve the
operation of Washington prisons these insights are all-the-more-important for other prison
systems which provide less room for analytic insights but offer more room for improvement
METHODS
This study sought to systematically evaluate Washington DOCrsquos use of long-term isolation over
time through rigorous application of mixed methods Comprehensive research studies about
restrictive housing use over more than a few years in any given state are rare and analyses
incorporating qualitative interviews with prisoners and staff are rarer still Only a few studies
exist of specific ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities one of these conducted in the Washington DOC was
10
completed more than 10 years ago2 A few additional studies have sought to analyze statistics
about durations of confinement racial impacts of isolation violence in isolation and recidivism
rates post-release from isolation in several different states3 This study then breaks new
ground for researchers and policymakers alike For this reason we share here a detailed
description of our methods in hopes that this research will serve as a model for both future
studies and ongoing researcher-practitioner collaborations
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION
At the center of our quantitative data analysis is a longitudinal administrative record set of the
entire DOC population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011
2014 and 2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12
million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) The scale and scope of
this data permitted our research team to independently develop measures of critical
independent variables like criminal history as well as of key dependent variables of interest
like rates of restrictive housing use Specifically this data set included the entire prison
conviction history for all 57000 prisoners in subject population permitting our research team
to independently identify the most serious current offense and to provide a consistent measure
of prisonersrsquo criminal histories in our analyses And this data set included not just prisoners in
some form of restrictive housing but the entire prison
population on each given snapshot date allowing us to
independently define and operationalize restrictive
housing use
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying
uniform coding procedures to compile event-level data
Quantitative Data bull 15 years 6 snapshot
intervals 2002-2017 bull 57130 subject-level records bull 24 million inter-facility
movements
2 Lorna Rhodes Total Confinement Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004) Sharon Shalev Supermax Controlling risk through solitary confinement (Portland OR Willan Publishing 2009) Keramet Reiter 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016)
3 See eg CS Briggs JL Sundt and TC Castellano ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 (2003) 1341-1376 David Lovell Kristin Cloyes David G Allen amp Lorna A Rhodes ldquoWho Lives in Supermaximum Custody A Washington State Studyrdquo Federal Probation Vol 642 (Dec 2000) 33-38 Daniel P Mears amp William D Bales ldquoSupermax Incarceration and Recidivismrdquo Criminology Vol 474 (2009) 1131-65 Keramet Reiter ldquoParole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007rdquo Punishment amp Society Vol 145 530-63 (Dec 2012)
11
into a subject-level dataset We computed the housing location and custody status of every
prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at each location and
subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as infractions
Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and plausible counts
and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all prisoners in six
snapshot cohorts We also used inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-tests) to test for
differences across cohorts and groups
We measured restrictive housing use by examining the intersection of custody status and
location identifying all prisoners assigned to maximum custody status (the highest level of
custody classification in DOC) all prisoners housed in Intensive Management Units (the most
secure housing units in DOC) and focusing in particular on individuals at the intersection of
this status and location Appendix A includes a matrix detailing more specifically how we
operationalized and measured restrictive housing use in DOC In a meeting with Research
Department Staff on December 7 2020 we confirmed this operationalization was consistent
with how DOC research staff are measuring restrictive housing use in DOC currently
Our operationalization of restrictive housing potentially undercounts one category of individual
in restrictive housing those who are neither assigned a maximum custody status nor housed in
an IMU but are nonetheless in some form of segregation (likely administrative or disciplinary)
Our analysis of prisonersrsquo confinement status used movement records to distinguish periods in
IMU from time spent either in other specialized facilities or in the general prison population
(ldquogeneral populationrdquo) but excluded within facility movements from one bed or cell to another
(likely 50 million in number for our subjects) A prisoner placed in segregation prior to transfer
to an IMU or assignment of maximum custody status would not be captured in our counts
Since 2015 the Research Department has had a flag in OMNI for ldquoad seg statusrdquo which allows
them to better capture this population that we do not observe this flag was not present in the
data obtained from DOC and no such flag exists for the pre-2015 data we analyze
In order to better account for the variation in both restrictive housing capacity and
characteristics over the entire fifteen years of our data set we worked closely with Kevin
Walker and Tim Thrasher to identify both (1) IMU capacity and (2) restrictive housing capacity
within non-IMU facilities over the entire 15-year-period of our study Appendix B includes a
table with our estimates of these capacities
We also systematically collected and categorized restrictive-housing oriented policy reforms
and reports between 2011 and 2017 peak periods of reform and focus of this study
12
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
Survey Data bull 225 prisoner surveys
(response rate 62) bull 90 staff surveys
(response rate na)
Prisoner surveys included 36 numbered questions Each contained a combination of yesno
ordinal bubble options and short answer sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to
explain or elaborate on their answers Topics included experiences in IMUs conditions of
confinement health and well-being and demographic background many questions were
drawn from existing studies on prisons and prisoner
experiences4 In all there were 89 substantive items on the
survey (excluding demographic questions) coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU)
ordinal (eg daily weekly monthly describing frequency of
interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) variables
Staff surveys included 70 numbered questions Most questions were yesno or multiple choice
but there were also some open-ended probing questions Topics included corrections
employment history job responsibilities experience working in the IMU beliefs regarding
restrictive housing attitudes towards coworkers and supervisors opinions regarding restrictive
housing reforms feelings of safety health and well-being and demographic information Many
questions were drawn from existing studies with correctional staff5
Between February and April 2017 PI Reiter and Project Manager Chesnut conducted two
separate trips to collect survey data from prisoners and staff across all five of the IMUs in DOC
Surveys were piloted at MCC in February 2017 to allow for slight revisions of any confusing text
in the instrument Surveys were distributed to prisoners and staff in IMUs at the remaining four
facilities (CBCC SCCC WCC and WSP) at the end of March and beginning of April 2017 At each
site Reiter and Chesnut first spoke individually to each maximum custody status IMU prisoner
at cell-front accompanied by Mission Housing Administrator Thrasher We explained survey
participation was optional and that all data would be anonymized and answered any questions
about the research project For security reasons only paper-and-pen surveys were offered to
4 For studies from which relevant questions were drawn see Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates (Santa Monica CA The Rand Corporation 1982 Report No N-1635-NIJ) Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014) Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J ldquoTheoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation and normalization in Danish prisonsrdquo Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
5 See eg J Sundt ldquoThe Effect of Administrative Segregation on Prison Order and Organizational Culturerdquo in Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and Future Directions NCJ 250323 (Washington DC US Department of Justice National Institute of Justice 2016)
13
the maximum custody prisoner population surveys were distributed first thing in the morning
and collected a few hours later by Reiter and Chesnut We also provided stamped self-
addressed envelopes upon request for those participants who wanted additional time In total
we distributed surveys to all 363 prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU in spring of
2017 prisoners returned 225 surveys for a response rate of 62
Following survey distribution to the prisoners we held an informal question-and-answer
session with custody staff on the unit to introduce ourselves and the research project Staff
like prisoners were informed that the survey was optional anonymized and only aggregated
results would be shared with DOC We then distributed paper surveys to custody and non-
custody staff working in each IMU We encouraged staff to return the surveys to us before we
left each facility but we also provided staff with self-addressed stamped envelopes upon
request For staff we also shared digital copies of the survey through e-mail following each site
visit We also made a special effort to seek out non-custody staff working in the IMU such as
medical staff mental health workers classification counselors and program facilitators In
order to be as inclusive as possible we repeated this process again in the afternoon following
shift change and left copies of the surveys with self-addressed stamped envelopes for the
graveyard shift In all staff returned 90 surveys Calculating a response rate for this strategic
convenience sample is not possible because we sought to reach staff across all three shifts
included non-custody staff like nurses and educators who sometimes work across units and
distributed surveys in person and via e-mail
The surveys served a dual purpose in the research project First they provided a baseline
understanding of the challenges of living and working in Washington IMUs as well as of the
attitudes towards recent reforms which was critical to the research team as we developed
interview instruments and conducted interviews Second they gave the research team an
opportunity to introduce the research project to prisoners and staff laying the groundwork for
interview participation in subsequent months
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
The qualitative prisoner interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured
questions Questions included a combination of yesno options and probing open-ended
follow-ups Topics included conditions of daily life (prior to and during isolation) perceived
state of physical and mental health access to medical treatment and experiences with
required programming in the IMU Where possible included questions replicated those asked
in existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences Fourteen of the questions making up
the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) a standardized scale used to identify indicators of
serious mental illness were embedded within the interview instrument In total 40 of the
14
substantive items on the interview instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 14
embedded questions designed to establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg How much does it cost Interview Instruments to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have bull Questions about conditions you noticed any changes in your health since you health programming reforms have been in this IMU) variables Such questions demographics always included open-ended follow-up questions bull Embedded Brief Psychiatric (eg Can you describe those changes) We first used Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment the interview instrument at the smallest IMU in for prisoners Washington interviewing 15 prisoners We then
revised both the wording and ordering of questions for maximum clarity and engagement in the
remaining 91 interviews we conducted across the four other IMUs in the state
The condensed year-two instrument contained approximately 70 questions The questions
largely replicated the year-one questions ndash but excluded the questions about background
demographic and experiences over time in prison and adjusted some other questions to
address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status As part of both initial and
follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psychological assessment both
during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following (for the 10 observational
items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech) interviews For the 14 self-
report questions embedded in the interview guide interviewers asked about the presence of
symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard Importantly this means that BPRS scores
certainly undercount symptoms experienced intermittently or outside of that two-week time
window
The qualitative staff interview instrument consisted of 87 numbered semi-structured questions
As with the prisoner interview instrument these questions included a combination of yesno
questions and probing open-ended follow-up questions Topics included IMU policies job
responsibilities personal safety health relationships with coworkers and supervisors
restrictive housing reforms and demographic information
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and to develop the interview
instruments Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol
for administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment
training sessions in year one with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Ventura and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Using a set of seven standardized
BPRS training videos of patient interviews the research team viewed and rated each video and
15
discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for
interrater reliability Dr Ventura conducted an interrater reliability analysis and confirmed that
trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years
2017 and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment
team when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the
standard training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings In addition to
ensure appropriate administration of the BPRS in a prison setting Dr Ventura accompanied the
research team on the first leg of the first visit to MCC in year one Dr Ventura co-conducted
interviews with several team members and was available to clarify questions throughout the
length of the trip In sum this extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members
over the two years (9 women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral
students (9) with expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement
settings identified and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being
studied and minimized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application
of questions and assessments
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that
all information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To identify potential participants the Mission Housing Administrator
provided a list of all prisoners on maximum custody status at a given IMU a day or two prior to
the research teamrsquos visit to that IMU Chesnut then randomized that list of prisoners in order
to identify a list and order of potential research participants (with the target goal of
interviewing roughly one-third of maximum custody status prisoners in each IMU) To recruit
participants a research team member approached potential participants at cell-front
explained the study and noted whether the prisoner would be interested in participating
Willing prisoners were escorted one-by-one to a confidential area (monitored visually but not
aurally by DOC staff) consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research
team In all 106 prisoners participated in interviews 39 percent of the prisoners approached
for participation refused comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people6 Interviews
ranged in length from 45 minutes to 3 hours
6 D Lovell ldquoPatterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prisonrdquo Criminal Justice amp Behavior Vol 358 985ndash1004 (2008) M Berzofsky amp S Zimmer National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recommendations
16
Immediately following year-one interviews interviewers asked participants whether they
consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to participating in one-year
follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all but two (n = 104)
consented in writing to medical file reviews At Interviews Completed the conclusion of each prisoner interview in both bull Random sample of prisoners year year one and year two interviewers completed one 106 ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items Following bull Follow-up prisoner interviews interviews interviewers reviewed consenting year two 80 participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of bull Strategic convenience sample of diagnoses prescriptions and substance abuse staff year one 77 status DOC additionally provided electronic
administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as
comparable population-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
In year two the UCI research team attempted to re-interview all of the year-one participants
who were still incarcerated within Washington DOC In total we conducted 80 re-interviews
Only 4 participants refused re-interviews 1 died and 21 were unavailable because of
institutional transfers or being on parole This drop-out rate is low compared to similar studies7
In year two 28 participants were in the IMU and 52 were back in the general prison
population These year-two follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and two hours
During the research teamrsquos return visits to each IMU in the state in year two the team made
presentations to IMU staff about the research findings from year one including the results of
the year-one staff interviews Unlike prisoners staff were not randomly selected for interviews
during year one Rather a strategic convenience sample of custody and non-custody staff was
identified Efforts were made to interview custody staff from all three shifts non-custody staff
(medical and programming) and supervisory staff at all five facilities Staff at each facility were
informed ahead of time about scheduled interview trips and encouraged by DOC administrative
leadership to participate if they felt comfortable Once on site at each facility UCI team
(US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018) httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf
7 JH Kleschinsky LB Bosworth SE Nelson EK Walsh HJ Shaffer ldquoPersistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samplesrdquo J Stud Alcohol Drugs Vol 705751ndash761 (2009) B Western A Braga D Hureau C Sirois ldquoStudy retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach populationrdquo Proc Natl Acad Sci USA Vol 11320 5477ndash5485 (2016)
17
members directly approached staff (usually in the afternoon or on the second day of interviews
on site after the work of identifying and moving prisoners into interview rooms was underway)
to identify willing interview participants Staff were informed participation was voluntary and
would not involve incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them
adversely and that all information shared would be protected and anonymized In all 77 staff
from across all five IMUs and headquarters participated in interviews Staff included
correctional officers supervisors mental and medical health practitioners program and
educational instructors and institutional and headquarters leadership Since staff were
strategically sampled and many staff interviewed worked both in the IMU and in other units
within the prison a refusal rate cannot readily be calculated for the staff interviews Staff
interviews lasted between 30 minutes and 3 hours
All interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed
translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details
(names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti for analysis (as discussed further below) All
identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings transcripts
BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a locked
filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible only
through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data
cleaning and linking The University of California IRB approved this study as did the Washington
DOC research department
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS
To develop a codebook for analyzing these hundreds of hours of interview data six team
members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-line inductively exploring how participants
understood restrictive housing generating an initial list of over 500 codes8 These codes were
further refined and categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 9 thematic
code groups IMU Relations Use of Force Safety Health IMU Culture IMU Policy IMU
Conditions Enduring the IMU and Prison Work Issues After a round of pilot coding in which
each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one recoding coding
discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of interest such
as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months to resolve
8 K Charmaz Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis (Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006) Y Chun Tie M Birks K Francis ldquoGrounded theory research A design framework for novice researchersrdquo SAGE open medicine 7 1-8 (2019)
18
discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were calculated
for intercoder agreement
BPRS data were imported into SPSS and Stata to generate descriptive statistics including the
comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS items and factors among three groups of
prisoner interview participants year-one participants year-two participants housed in the IMU
and year-two participants housed in the general population Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos
test were performed to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing
location time raceethnicity and gang status
FINDINGS
We collected a large amount of robustly detailed data for this project and are still in the process
of analyzing and synthesizing across the administrative data surveys and interview transcripts
To date the UCI research team has published three peer-reviewed articles based on this
research two drawing primarily on the prisoner
interviews in leading public health journals the Initial Publications American Journal of Public Health and PLOS One 1 Reiter et al American Journal of
Public Health (2020) and one drawing primarily on DOC administrative 2 Strong et al PLOS One (2020) data in a leading criminology journal Justice 3 Lovell et al Justice Quarterly (2020) Quarterly All three articles are included as
appendices to this report In addition to
summarizing findings from those articles here we include as-yet unpublished findings from our
analyses of administrative data and our surveys and interviews with prisoners and staff We
present three categories of findings (1) patterns and conditions in restrictive housing use (2)
impacts on staff and (3) impacts on prisoners
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
Over the 2010s DOC implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals we focus on
analyzing here First DOC sought to reduce the number of people in restrictive housing
Second DOC sought to reduce the length of time individuals spend in restrictive housing Third
DOC sought to mitigate the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive housing Our analysis
indeed finds improvements in each of these three areas of focus though we also identify
fluctuations in the degree of improvement barriers and challenges to implementing these
improvements and additional areas that might deserve to be the focus of additional reforms
We focus in this section primarily on our analysis of administrative data the six cohorts of
snapshot data at three-year-intervals between 2002 and 2017 along with restrictive-housing
oriented policy reforms and reports we collected as part of our analysis We concentrate
19
particularly on maximum custody status in the IMU the central focus of our study However
where relevant we also present findings on other population in the IMU As we detail in our
2020 Justice Quarterly article (Appendix C) where we published some of the initial findings
presented here a range of custody statuses and housing locations are highly relevant to
understanding overall restrictive housing use For instance those on maximum custody status
outside of an IMU and those not on maximum custody status in an IMU both experience
restrictive housing conditions and also reflect the range of behavioral challenges and security
threats DOC is managing at any given time
FLUCTUATIONS IN POPULATIONS AND LENGTHS OF STAY IN IMUS
Overall the maximum custody population in IMUs in Washington state was lower in 2017 (342
prisoners) than at its peak in 2011 (472 prisoners) However over the entire period of our
quantitative data analysis there were many fluctuations in this population from a low of 149
prisoners in 2002 to another dip to 283 prisoners in 2014 Figure 1 presents the number of
prisoners in IMUs by custody status from 2002 to 2017 These numbers suggest that the widely
touted reductions in the DOC maximum custody IMU population which inspired this study
were not sustained over the course of the study Those in IMU who were not on maximum
custody statusmdashlargely those held on administrative or disciplinary segregationmdashsaw similar
variation in population over time peaking in 2008 and falling somewhat in subsequent years
Figure 1 Prisoners in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
800
700
s r 600
en 177
osi 500 337
r 260
Pf 291
o 400
r e 300
mb 144
Nu 472
200 105 338 342
283 100 228
149
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
As a proportion of the total prison population those held in IMUs peaked in 2008 when 39
percent of the prison population was housed in an IMU That proportion was substantially
20
similar in 2011 before dropping slightly in 2014 and 2017 Figure 2 presents the percentage of
the total prison population held in IMU by custody status
Figure 2 Percentage of Total Prison Population in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
3 27
20
09
14
16
09
19
10
17141
2
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n 19
07
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
Ave
rage
Day
s in
IMU
Reductions in the average length of stay (LOS) for prisoners on maximum custody status in the
IMU were more sustained than the 2014 population reductions Figure 3 presents the average
number of days in the IMU by custody status For those on maximum custody status in the IMU
on the 2017 snapshot date the average LOS in the IMU was 214 days lower than even in 2002
(average LOS 227 days) and a dramatic decrease from the 2011 peak average LOS of nearly
348 days This represents a reduction in average lengths of IMU stays of more than four months
ndash an impressive policy intervention Similarly the average LOS in IMU for those held in IMUs but
not on maximum custody status on the snapshot date (likely those on administrative or
disciplinary segregation) saw a sustained decrease across the study period from an average of
114 days in 2002 to 71 days in 2017
Figure 3 Average Length of Stay in IMU (Days) by Custody Status and Confinement Location 2002-2017
348 326
214
128117115 91
7166
306 284
227
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
21
These reductions in the average IMU LOS however is only one measure of how much time
prisoners are spending in IMUs Another measure of time-in-the-IMU is cumulative over a
prisonerrsquos entire sentence how much time Figure 4 Average Cumulative Days Spent in IMU by All Prisoners 2002-2017 will he spend in an IMU setting9 Across the
entire Washington prison population 90 cumulative time spent in an IMU has 80 increased steadily from an average of 43
Cum
ulat
ive
Day
s in
IMU
in IMU declined in recent years for the maximum custody population a greater share of the
incarcerated population experienced placement in an IMU
This analysis suggests two critical areas of focus Figure 5 Percentage of All Prisoners Spending at Least One Day in an IMU 2002-2017 IMU reform First reductions in IMU
populations and lengths of stay must be 3433tracked over time to analyze whether they are
sustained Second rates of IMU use represent
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n
another critical measure in assessing IMU
reform in addition to populations and lengths
of stay In our 2020 Justice Quarterly article we
hypothesize that IMU capacity is closely tied to
IMU use noting that IMU populations increase
with increasing bed capacity and decrease with
decreasing bed capacity this hypothesis
requires further analysis and deserves further
policy attention
24 25 28
30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
days in 2002 to almost double that at 82
days on average in 2017 (see Figure 4)
Indeed a greater proportion of people in
DOC experienced IMU confinement over
time In 2002 24 of the prison population
had spent at least one day in an IMU By
2017 over one-third (34) of the prison
population had spent time in an IMU (Figure
5) In short while the average length of stay
9 For each snapshot year cumulative length of stay in IMU is measured from the beginning of each prisonerrsquos current sentence up until the snapshot date
22
In sum the 2014 reductions in maximum custody IMU populations in Washington have not been sustained Average lengths of stay in IMU for the maximum custody population have steadily decreased since 2011 but more prisoners in Washington DOC experience IMU
confinement each year Decreasing IMU capacity and reducing lengths of stay are both key to
sustaining decreases in IMU populations
RACIAL DISPROPORTIONALITIES
While Washington DOC had some successes in reducing IMU use especially in reducing average
lengths of stay the racially disproportionate impact of the IMU has increased dramatically since
2002 The racial disproportion of the IMU actually peaked in 2014 when the IMU population
had recently declined Figure 6 presents the racialethnic makeup of the IMU maximum custody
and general prison populations In 2014 37 percent of
maximum custody IMU prisoners were Hispanic as
compared to only 12 percent of the general prison
population As the maximum custody IMU population
increased this racial disproportionality decreased
slightly in 2017 27 percent of maximum custody IMU
prisoners were Hispanic as compared to only 13 percent of the general prison population
Figure 7 presents the racialethnic disproportionality of the IMU maximum custody population
relative to the general prison population Hispanic gang members were similarly over-
represented in the maximum custody IMU population in these years (see Figure 8)
This racial disproportionality in maximum custody IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories (especially infraction rates)
and suggests an area ripe for further policy attention We look forward to conducting further
analyses of the administrative data to better understand how these various predictors of
maximum custody status IMU classifications interact over time
Between 2005 and 2017 Hispanic prisoners were 2-3 times as likely to be in the IMU as in the general prison population
23
Figure 4 Racial and Ethnic Make-Up IMU Maximum Custody and General Prison Population 2002-2017
White Non-Hispanic LatinoHispanic
70 70
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population General Population IMU-Max IMU-Max
Black Non-Hispanic Other Non-Hispanic
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
30 30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max General Population IMU-Max
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
0
10
20
24
-
Figure 5 RacialEthnic Disproportionality in the IMU Maximum Custody Population 2002-2017 D
ispro
port
iona
lity
Ratio
35
30
25
20
15
10
05
00 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
White Non-Hispanic Black Non-Hispanic OtherUnknown Hispanic
How to read this chart
Disproportionality ratios (DR) greater than one reflect disproportionate representation in the IMU Maximum Custody population relative to the general population
DR equal to one reflects equal representation in IMU Maximum Custody and general population groups
DR lower than one reflects an under representation of the racialethnic group
25
BEHAVIORAL PROFILES GANG AFFILIATION AND SERIOUS INFRACTIONS
While our analysis demonstrates that racial disproportionality steadily increased among maximum custody IMU prisoners over the study period especially relative to the general prison population overall behavioral profiles among both general population and maximum custody IMU prisoners fluctuated over the study period
First in the general population the overall proportion of prisoners identified as gang affiliated increased only slightly over the study period from 19 percent to 24 percent of all prisoners While the overall proportion of gang-affiliated prisoners in the IMU was about 3 times higher this proportion also increased only slightly over the study period from 60 percent to 67 percent of all maximum custody IMU prisoners In the general population white- and black-affiliated gang members remained relatively stable over the study period (4-5 percent of the population and 9-10 percent of the population respectively) In the maximum-custody IMU population white- and black-affiliated gang membership fluctuated somewhat across the snapshot years while Hispanic-affiliated gang membership increased substantially from 21 percent in 2002 to 32 percent in 2017 Relative to their share of general population Hispanic-affiliated gang members were consistently over-represented in the maximum-custody IMU population making up nearly 40 percent of the population in both 2008 and 2014 Figure 8 displays this fluctuating over-representation of Hispanic-affiliated gang members while Figure 9 displays the racial breakdown of gang-affiliates in the maximum custody IMU population
Figure 6 Affiliation with HispanicLatino Gangs in IMU
Maximum Custody and General Populations
Between 2002 and 2017 Hispanic-affiliated gang membership in the general prison population doubled from 4 percent to 8 percent and in the maximum custody IMU population doubled from 21 percent to a peak of 40 percent in 2014
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max
26
Figure 7 Gang Affiliation in the IMU Maximum Custody Population by Type of Gang
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Hispanic-Affiliated Black-Affiliated White-Affiliated Other Gang
Second in the general population overall annual infraction rates decreased slightly over the study period (from an average of 13 infractions per year in 2002 to an average of 11 in 2017) Figure 10 displays average annual overall infraction rates as well as counts of violent assaults and staff assaults for the maximum custody IMU and general prison populations Average numbers of violent infraction and staff assaults remained low and stable at an average of 05 violent infractions per year and 01 staff assaults per
Annual infraction rates and counts year in the general population Between 2005 and of both violent and staff
2017 infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU infractions were fairly stable over population were fairly stable However overall time in both the general prison infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU population and the maximum population were about 5-6 times higher than in the custody IMU population from 2005 general prison population Following a peak of 83 in 2002 the mean annual infraction rate for the maximum custody IMU population fluctuated between 4 and 5 infractions per year while the average number of violent infractions hovered around 3 and the average number of staff assaults hovered just under one The relative stability of serious misconduct in both the general and the maximum custody IMU populations (as compared to the instability of the IMU population over this period) raise questions about whether and how infractions are related to maximum custody IMU placements ndash questions we look forward to addressing in future analyses
27
Figure 8 In-Prison Violations IMU Maximum Cu stody and General Population 2002-2017
IMU Maximum Custody General Population
9 9
8 8
s n 7 7
oitca 6 6
rfnI f 5 5
o e ta 4 4
Rtn 3 3
uC
o
2 2
1 1
0 0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Annual Infraction Rate Annual Infraction Rate Violent Infractions (Count) Violent Infractions (Count) Staff Assaults (Count) Staff Assaults (Count)
EXISTING POLICY REFORM SUPPORTS FURTHER RESTRICTIVE HOUSING REDUCTIONS
Over the 2010s Washington DOC enacted an impressively wide range of reforms in order to achieve the reductions in IMU populations and lengths of stay described above These reforms also sought to mitigate the harshness of the conditions in IMUs or restrictive housing Table 1 below provides our summary of the reforms we learned about in conversations with DOC leadership staff and prisoners as well as through searches of policy documents archived on the DOC website These reforms included (a) institutionally-oriented reforms like altering conditions of confinement especially through providing new programming opportunities for prisoners in the IMU (b) organizational restructuring designed to facilitate delivering these new programs and (c) individually-focused reforms to support behavioral modification better mental health care and alternatives to IMU placements Dan Pacholke who was the Secretary of Corrections during the early planning stages of this project co-authored a 2015 report More
28
Than Emptying Beds which describes many of these reforms in more detail centralize decision-making implement programming in segregation and support staff10
Our interviews with prisoners and staff confirmed that these reforms were making a difference day-to-day in terms of the overall operation and individual experience of living and working in the IMUs Specifically staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
Table 1 Categories and Types of Washington DOC Restrictive Housing Reform as identified in 2017
Conditions of Confinement
Organizational Restructuring
Behavior Modification
Mental Health Preventative
Congregate Programming
Creation of a Mission Housing Administrator
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (in-cell)
Elimination of self-harm infractions
Alternative sanctions
Level System Mission-Based Housing Units
amp Teams
Individual Behavior Management
Program (IBMP)
Disruptive Hygiene Protocol
Alternative Specialized
Housing Units (TRU WRU)
Increased Elective access to
programming (GED
Redemption
Facility Risk Management
Teams
Chemical dependency class
counselors MH staff
(attending to
Operation Place Safety (2013-14)
Book Club) prisoner-staff ratios)
Nature Immersion
(Blue) Room
Indeterminate sentencing
TransitionStep-down Unit
From staff we consistently heard that there was less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than in the early 2000s Staff described how prior to recent reforms in the IMUs cell extractions were common ldquoIt was completely rocking and rollingrdquo was a phrase we heard repeatedly But by 2017 cell extractions and other violent prisoner-staff encounters were rare One staff member we interviewed mourned the change acknowledging ldquoI really enjoyed cell extractionsrdquo but he also said he knew the culture change represented an improvement in everyonersquos well-being ldquoIs it actually good for everyone to do that stuff you know what I mean No The answer is nordquo This acceptance of non-violent de-escalation as the
10 Dan Pacholke amp Sandy Mullins More Than Emptying Beds A Systems Approach to Segregation Reform (Washington DC Bureau of Justice Assistance 2015) No NCJ249858 httpsbjaojpgovsitesgfilesxyckuh186filespublicationsMorethanEmptyingBedspdf
29
status quo was especially noticeable in comparison with data Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago Prisoners also agreed that cell extractions were rare as one noted ldquoWere not doing a lot of cell-extractions here I havent seen a cell-extraction since Ive been here So compared to the California system and the Federal system ndash I was teamed [extracted
from my cell] just to give me fluidsrdquo Our pre-interview Staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
surveys confirmed these qualitative descriptions a majority of staff (just over 60 percent of respondents) reported they ldquodid not feel unsaferdquo working in the IMU and even more prisoners (75 percent of respondents) reported that they had never felt unsafe in the IMU
From prisoners we consistently heard that they had access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of other programs Although prisoners frequently expressed concerns about the quality and frequency of healthcare they received they also consistently reported that they were able to access at least some care filing and receiving responses to medical kites seeing medical staff regularly and getting adequate care for major illnesses and terminal diseases like cancer For instance in our pre-interview surveys more than 50 percent of prisoners reported seeing medical staff daily One prisonerrsquos comments were representative ldquoI do trust the mental health staff yes I just believe that they should do morerdquo But another said he appreciated the level of care in his current IMU ldquoI would say that this one addresses certain mental health issues better than others you know Theyrsquore more quick to deal with the mental health here with more one-on-onerdquo
Overall in our interviews with prisoners and staff as well as in our observations of custody classification committee meetings we saw that those prisoners remaining on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods
bull Prisoners are in the IMU for had well-documented histories of severe
specific identifiable reasons behavioral issues We interviewed prisoners who
bull Prisoners receive regular had repeatedly attacked staff prisoners who had individualized assessments regarding repeatedly harmed themselves through actions their continued IMU placement like head banging and swallowing sharp objects bull Treatment and custody staff work and prisoners who had been in the IMU so long together to develop targeted they did not want to return to the general prison interventions with the goal of population In observations in IMUs and at transitioning even the most headquarters we witnessed compassionate behaviorally challenging and risky custody and treatment staff grappling with how to individuals out of the IMU design individualized plans to address and overcome these behavioral challenges ndash from weekly check-ins with headquarters leadership to the provision of tailored incentives for exercise equipment and art supplies In particular the
30
Mission Housing Administrator is familiar with every individual in the IMU regularly assessing and documenting justifications for their placem ent institutionalizing such individual-level knowledge and attention is critical to maintenance of existing progress and continued reform
In sum prisoners are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons prisoners receive regular individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement by a classification committee and treatment and custody staff work together to develop targeted interventions with the goal of transi tioning e ven the most behavioral ly chall enging and risk y i ndividuals out of the IMU This is in stark contrast to other systems like California where hundreds of prisoners have spent years in restrictive housing with little or no evidence of unresolved or severe behavioral issues justifying their continued maintenance in highly restrictive conditions
Still administrative data suggests that Washington DOC rsquos 2014 IMU population reductions have not been sustained that an increasing proportion of people in DOC experience IMU
confinement over the study period and that Washington DOC is a leader among state this confinement has a racially correctional systems in restrictive housing disproportionate impact Moreover as we reform administrative leaders have built a detail below prisoners and staff raised a solid foundation for continued reforms ndash number of concerns with both IMU conditions including IMU population reductions and reforms decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions Nonetheless Washington DOC has laid a solid
foundation for continued reforms ndash including IMU population reductions decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions ndash with the policy changes they have implemented over the last five years especially Both individual- and institution-level reforms have enabled the successes DOC has achieved to date Indeed these reforms demonstrate that Washington is a leader among state correctional systems in seeking to understand how prisoners end up in restrictive housing for extended periods designing programs to change IMU -stay trajectories and implementing alternati ve pathways that shift patterns of restrictive housing placements across institutions
IMPACTS ON STAFF
In this section we focus on our analysis of (1) the 90 surveys we collected from staff working in IMUs and (2) the 77 interviews we conducted with sta ff working in or supervising Among the 90 staff completing sur veys 74 per cent were mal e 66 pe rcent were married 84 perce nt were white and their average age was 44 Among the 77 staff completing interviews 74 percent were male 57 percent were marrie d 84 percent were white and their average age was 42
31
Because we do not have overall demographics of staff in W ashington DOC we cannot compare the demographics of our interview participants to the overall demographics of DOC staff
We highl ight four the mes from our surveys of and interviews with staff Each theme suggests areas where DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU staff as well as areas where DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to staff well- being positive aspects of IMU staff culture negative effects of working in the IMU on staff staff desire for input into IMU policies and procedures and specific staff objections to IMU reforms
APPRECIATION FOR IMU STAFF CULTURE
IMU staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their colleagues and with immediate supervisors ndash both in the ir sur vey response s and duri ng i nterviews Nearly 90 percent of correctional officers surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unit rdquo for instance On average staff described being satisfied with their
IMU staff largely like their jobs trust jobs 75 percent said they were mostly or very
their colleagues and immediate satisfied and 64 percent said they would take the supervisors and feel safe at work same job again Likewise 75 percent reported that This satisfaction and professionalism their immediate supervisors frequently asked for can and should be leveraged in their opinions about problems (describing t he implementing IMU reforms frequency as either ldquosometimesrdquo or ldquoalwaysrdquo) And two-thirds of staff (67 percent) reported feeling safe working in the IMU
In our informal conversations and formal interviews with staff we repeatedly observed and heard staff expressing trust and appreciation for their colleagues in the IMU In some cases our presence required additional staffing on the units and many ldquoregularrdquo IMU staff noted how working with staff unfamiliar with IMU routines and relationships was disruptive in contrast to their usual trusting relationship with their ldquoregularrdquo IMU colleagues One staff member rsquos comment succinctly represents the perspectives of correctional officers who appreciate working in the highly controlled IMU environment with trusted partners
I think IMU is one of the safest places to work in the whole prison system I mean theyre locked down 23 out of 24 hours a day youre escorting them with another person theyre in restraints Yeah things can happen Sure the y can make weapons Sure they can do ndash but they can do that out there more easily To me you know what you have in an IMU and you got some ndash at least you got a partner there with you under the circumstances
32
In sum IMU staff largely like their jobs tr ust their colleagues and immediate supervisors and feel safe at work This solid foundation of satisfaction and professionalism is a significant asset to DOC leadership work ing with line staff to communicate about and implement IMU reforms
NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON STA FF OF IMU W ORK
Although staff described feeling safe in the IMU satisfaction with the work and loyalty and trust in their colleagues they also described negative effects of working in the IMU environment especially ongoing negative mental and physical health consequences Among the 90 staff completing surveys the average staff member reported their overall health was good (a rating of 3 out of 5) A significant minority of staff (one quarter) however reported their overall health was poor or fair (a rating of 1 or 2 out of 5) While their self-assessments of their overall health varied staff consistently reported high levels of stress the average staff member reported their overall stress level as moderate (a rating of 2 out of 3) and one -third of all respondents reported the ir overall stress levels as high (a rating of 3 out of 3) Staff consistently reported that these high stress levels affected their overall health 80 percent of staff reported that stress had affected their health either ldquosomerdquo or ldquoa lotrdquo (a rating of 2 or 3 out of 3) in the past year Overall staff thought DOC failed to address correctional officersrsquo physical and mental health concerns they consistently disagreed with positive statements like ldquo DOC provides adequate services to me et correctional officersrsquo physical health needs rdquo Additional investments in supporting staff well-being could be both well received and impactful
Comments on the surveys and our subsequent interviews with staff in IMUs provided context for these overall reports about high stress levels in the IMU First staff perceived having greater ndash and more unreasonable ndash obligations during a workday in the IMU than elsewhere in the prison For example one correctional officer wrote ldquoIMU staff do twice as many duties as regular staff They never get compensated for all the extra wor k and stressrdquo This sentiment of imbalanced workload across units was echoed by another custody staff respondent ldquoStaff are
consistently overworked in the IMUs They are IMU staff identified key stressors required to do a job that requires twice the work of 1 Being overworked by additional a correctional officer working e lsewhere Staff deal
responsibilities with a lot of stress but are still reprimanded for 2 Being institutionally undervalued calling in sickrdquo
and under-supported 3 Needing to be hypervigilant at Second while staff often reported trusting
work and at home collaborative relationships with their immediate supervisors they perceived institutional leadership
as unsympathetic and indifferent to the unique stressors of working (and feeling overworked) in the IMU Specifically correctional officers criticized DOC in general for not providing support
33
for staff and thereby undermining safety in the IMU As one officer said (and m any others echoed) ldquoThis place does not care about staff All they care about is making things look good and keeping the offenders happy at all costs This results in COs sa ying screw it and not caring anymore which makes things unsaferdquo
Third while staff largely reported feeling safe at work in the IMU they also reported being hypervigilant on the job and also at home off the job Correctional officers reported that they were aware of the pervasiveness of risk in their work ldquoWe all have to understand that when we take a job like this anything can happen at any time That is the risk that we all take This job is not for everybodyrdquo Nearly all (98) survey respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they ldquoalways have to keep it in mind that t rouble could happen any timerdquo while at work Moreover respondentsrsquo levels of stress and perceptions of risk were strongly correlated those respondents who reported they worked in ldquodangerous jobsrdquo and were always dealing with ldquosome sort of crisisrdquo were also more likely to report higher stress levels
Importantly staff seemed to struggle with leaving these anxieties hypervigilant states of mind and stressors at work Staff consistently described being on edge and worried about their safety outside of work As one staff member said
I definitely notice like going to hellip fairs and that kind of stuff in the summer with the family hellip Irsquom definitely looking around a lot more Even going to like banks I look around a lot more I constantly ndash my headrsquos constantly on a swivel and Irsquo m in a place I donrsquo t really know Irsquo m definitely looking ndash grocery store Irsquo m constantly looked down ndash standing in the checkout line because there rsquos a million people standing there and yoursquo re constantl y look ing around lik e oh y eah that guyrsquos done time that guy has done time Like it rsquos - you can ndash itrsquos really weird when definitely get a sense for that kind of stuff And definitely keep an eye out
Another described how this habit of ldquolooking aroundrdquo and ldquokeeping an eye outrdquo was both a source of stress and a necessity for safety ldquoMy wife gives me a hard time about it all the time Shes like lsquoDo you ever turn the dirt bag meter off rsquo hellip And it may drive her nuts but i t keeps my family saferdquo One of the most common manifestations of this hypervigilance staff described Messaging about steps WADOC
is taking to value and support was being sure to sit in corners and face out looking at staff is critical some of these doors ldquoIn a restaurant I canrsquo t sit with my back to a steps should involve addressing group of peoplerdquo And another said ldquoI wonrsquo t let people pervasive hypervigilance and its
get behind me rdquo A growing body of literature about effects on stress correctional officer health suggests this pervasive
34
hypervigilance among correctional officers has long-term traumatic effects our data suggests that working in the IMU may exacerbate these effects 11
In sum our surveys of and interviews with staff revealed specific stress ors associated with work in the IMU the pressure of additional responsibilities and feeling overworked a sense of being institutionally undervalued and under -supported and percepti ons of high risk leading to persistent hypervigilance even outside of work These specific sources of stress in turn suggest areas where DOC could intervene to mitigate stress For instance messaging about steps DOC is taking to value and support staff and about DOC awareness of the additional work pressures some reforms entail could mitigate stress improve the culture of IMUs and even facilitate acceptance of future reforms For instance to the extent reforms actually reduce risk o r violence in the IMU communicating this clearly to staff could mitigate some of the hypervigilance that makes their work and home lives stressful
STAFF DESIRE FOR P OLICY INPUT
Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them fr om ldquoheadquartersrdquo In our survey of staff most staff across all facilities (63 percent) said that they ldquooften find it difficult to agree with this Departmentrsquo s policies on important issuesrdquo Likewise in our interviews with correctional officers and serge ants (45 of our 77 staff interviews) the majority (80 percent) reported that they experienced tension and conflict around IMU policies Indeed while three -quarters of staff reported that their immediate supervisors frequently asked for their opinions two-thirds reported that higher level administrators either ldquoneverrdquo or ldquorarelyrdquo asked for the ir opini ons
However when we asked staff to elaborate on what was wrong with IMU policies and reforms they almost always focused on the process by which reforms we re introduced rathe r than on the substance of the policy They described simply being told that a policy had changed without either being asked whether they agreed with the change or understanding why the policy had changed Specifically correctional officers and sergeants complained that administrative decision-makers above them were out of touch with the r eality of cur rent operations ldquoThey just make the decision hellip but we really donrsquo t have any say or influence how those kinds of decision are made They rsquore made by administrators that havenrsquo t been unit staff
11 See Lois James amp Natalie Todak ldquoPrison employment and post-traumatic stress disorder Risk and protective factorsrdquo American Journal of Industrial Medicine Vol 619 (2018) 725-32
35
in a long long time That donrsquo t remember or they forgot where they came fromrdquo Staff interpreted their lack of opportunities for input as some combination of leadership being lazy and uncaring ldquoLik e lsquowhy are they having us do this Donrsquo t they understand that this is a bad idea you knowrsquo You know the option is either they do understand itrsquo s a bad idea and they dont care or they donrsquo t know and theyrsquo re you know canrsquo t be bothered to askrdquo
On the other hand when unit managers or other leadership staff solicited the opinions of line staff about policy implementation the staff tended to be more accepting and less critical of the policy For instance in one facility a staff member described a policy change to allow porters on third shift in restrictive housing and how the sergeant and correctional unit supervisor (CUS) consulted the correctional officers about how to implement the policy ldquoSo what they did is the sergeant and the CUS came and ta lked to the staff and said lsquoWho would you guys recommend They have to be IMS program They have to be level four And they have to infraction-freersquo Fine So we all picked as a group hellip He was super polite model inmaterdquo While the correctional staff we re not involved in the formal policy decision to install porters on third shift administrators made room for correctional officersrsquo input and involvement by allowing them to choose who that person would be By involving correctional officers in that proce ss they increased staff support for and buy-in to the policy change
Indeed our research team heard repeatedly from staff that simply having the opportunity to talk with us about their work express their opinions and reflect on their experiences was a comfort and a relief ldquolike a weight off their shouldersrdquo Staff told us this individually duri ng interviews and communicated this during our de-briefs with unit leadership at the end Staff wanted more input into policy ndashto have
of each site visit in the summer of 201 7 The a chance to air their opinions and to have
eager and thoughtful participation by staff in input into mechanisms of policy
our interviews provides yet another implementation on the ground
indication of their interest in and wi llingness to engage in conversations about policy reform In fact bringing in outside researchers to systematically seek input from staff (as DOC frequently d oes) whether in the form of surveys or interviews might be one way to increase both staff perce ptions that they have a voice in policy processes and their willingness to implement new policies
In sum survey responses interview analyses and informal conversations all suggest that the manner in which reform and policy changes are presented to sta ff matters the more the policy is explained and the more staff input is solicited in the reform process especially as to the details and mechanisms of policy implementation the more likely staff will be to support and facilitate reform implementation
36
STAFF OBJECTIONS TO I MU R EFORMS
While staff most frequently complained about the manner in which reforms were introduced and especially about their lack of input in policy implementation they also described specific objections to reforms ndash largely in terms of the impact these reforms had on their day -to-day work and their percepti ons of whether or not staff safety and well- being were being pr ioritized
First staff perceived many reforms as prioritizing prisoner well-being over staff well-being IMU staff described IMU prisoners as the ldquoworst of the worstrdquo ndash the least deserving of the undeserving And they repeatedly described any new or additional benefits to prisoners ndash whether additional commissary items more time out of cell or more programming opportunities ndash as being risky and harmful to staff In some cases staff perceived the reforms or benefits to prisoners as pushing staff into new job roles for w hich they lacked both time and training For instance one correctional officer said ldquoI mean usually we come here and we have to do our job which is you know the yard showers and all that and you know guys say they program and we donrsquo t have time to figure out what theyrsquo re programming I mean thatrsquo s not our job description rdquo And another correctional officer described feeling as if he was expected to ldquodo more with lessrdquo ldquoYou know the other big thing with the removal of staff is the addition of programs you know So it seems like the classic managerial approach of do more with less and thatrsquos you know never well received by the people that have to do the more with lessrdquo In other words staff tended to see rehabilitative -oriented reforms as both a burden and oppositional to their fundamental job role ndash to maintain safety and security
Second staff perceived reforms addressing individual prisonersrsquo special needs like ext reme mental illness as inconsistent In fact staff repeatedly described individualized treatment as dangerous ndash encouraging prisoners to exploit and manipulate the rules to their own benefit For instance one correctional officer described his objecti ons to a protocol for responding to instances of feces-smear ing in the IMU ldquoIt is a
Staff characterized reforms as inconsistent manipulation point and they figured that out risky and dangerous Avoiding publicly
Hey on a Tuesday and Thursday we donrsquo t contradicting staff and communicating have yard and showers Well I want to take a more systematically about the benefits of shower so Irsquom going to smear feces on t he reform for staff could minimize resistance wall so I can go get my shower Thatrsquo s how that works And we have to do i trdquo Other correctional officers objected to provision of things like a nerf ball for throwing or soap for carving ndash both individualized attempts to address specific behavioral problems ndash as opening the door for other prisoners to make new demands both adding to officersrsquo daily list of obligations and making security harder to maintain
37
Third staff described how reforms prioritizing prisonersrsquo needs undermined their ability to safely manage a difficult population For instance one correctional officer described his frustration with trying to enforce the rules and being undermined or chastised by supervisors who were prioritizing prisoner well- being
Lots of the time we rsquore more nervous about getting in trouble for refusing guys If you ask them (about) yard and shower and they donrsquo t answer and you ask them multiple times and raising your voice to hopefully get their reaction then turn around and you refuse them and then all of a sudden they rsquore bitching and moaning about it and then all of a sudden now theyrsquo re getting it Itrsquo s just one of those things where it gets discouraging but it rsquos ndash I can only do my job
Another correctional officer described frustration with reforms seeking to limit the imposition of infractions and sanctions within the IMU ldquoNow you try to correct an inmate rsquos actions ndash Irsquo ve seen a lot of my infractions get thrown out not even processed hellip to where wersquo re not holding the people responsible And that becomes a safety risk for us Because the inmates donrsquo t show that same respectrdquo In sum correctional officers emphasize consistency as a tool for both maintaining their own authority and minimizing manipulation by prisoners
Staff did not simply describe how and why they objected to IMU reforms They also described how they resisted these reforms undermining policy implementation by ldquo burningrdquo prisoners on out-of-cell time breaking rules adhering to the letter rather than the spirit of a policy and encouraging grievances against leadership Often correctional officers justifi ed non-compliance or undermining policies as the only way to compensate for a lack of resources such as staff shortages and time limitations during a shift When describing this kind of undermining of policies interviewees contextualized these strategie s as coping strategies necessary to mitigate resource issues staff explained that additional programming and movement required more time and careful planning over the course of a shift For example one correctional officer described how he purposefully tried to reduce movement during his shift by asking about yards and showers as early as possible He elaborated about this tactic
It often results in the pri soner fi ling a gr ievance with the i nstitution Howeve r custody staff are aware of this and encourage these kinds of grievances as they provide evidence for their argument that administration are making unrealistic demands on them with the introduction of new policies and programs in restrictive housing units
Not all IMU correctional officers were so resistant to reform however For instance another officer (a sergeant) described IMU policies as changing frequently but characterized adapting to those changes as part of his job ldquoI adapt pretty well with the change You have to around
38
here Itrsquo s changing every day Whether itrsquo s a good change or not yoursquo re going to have your personal opinion and I sometimes donrsquo t agree but again Irsquo m a person who adapts to changerdquo This same office r in fact articulately described the importance of orienting re spectfully rather than punitive ly to prisoners in the IMU
I just always treat them as I would want to be treated or how I was raised which is with communication and just being respectful Irsquoll try to give you an example Like somebody will say lsquo That guyrsquos not going to get out of his cellrsquo Irsquo m going to say lsquo Whyrsquo Hersquo s going to say lsquo Because he was arguing with me and he rsquos a threat nowrsquo I go lsquoWell why not work wi th the guy and talk to him to tr y to come up with a better resolution rsquo Rather than just no movement and pi ss him off some more because no movementrsquo s not going to teach him any different than he rsquos already doing I mean if yoursquo re swearing and cussing at me you got your arms out and your fists going at me thatrsquo s not going to h elp you by having no movement Talking it outrsquos going to help you more So Irsquo m more of a ndash I guess Irsquom a littl e more libe ral on that part
While some staff we interviewed described this kind of ldquorespectfulrdquo or ldquoliberalrdquo approach as ldquodrinking the K ool-Aidrdquo of reform arguments coming from headquarters plenty of others asserted at least acceptance of if not also support for the ldquorespectfulrdquo approach As David Lovell noted comparing interviews he conducted in the early 2000s to those he conducted as part of our team in 2017 ldquoA hell of a lot has changed I did not hear the same stories about neglect and abuserdquo 12
In sum understanding the specific objections staff raised to existing reforms is critical to minimizing resistance and encouraging successful implementation of future reforms Indeed the specific objections staff raised to reforms suggest important areas where communication between line staff and supervisors could be clarified and improved
bull The perceived contradiction between rehabilitation and saf ety could be acknowledged and addressed in communicating with staff about reforms
bull The possibilities for simultaneously improving both prisoner and staff well- being through reform could be emphasized
12 Conversation with David Lovell Feb 24 2021 notes on file with author
39
bull Supervisors and non-custody staff advocating for indiv idualized interventions need to (1) address line staff concerns with inconsistency in treatment and policy and (2) strategize to avoid undermining line staffrsquo s authority in day-to-day interactions
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS
In this section we focus on our analysis of the interviews we conducted with a random sample of 106 maximum custody status IMU prisoners in the summer of 2017 and re -interviews conducted with 80 of these participants still incarcerated in the summer of 20 18 Where relevant we also include some findings from the 225 surveys we collected from prisoners in IMUs in the spring of 2017 Our random sample of 106 prisoner interview participants had a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU and mean of 5 prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Forty -two percent of our participants were white 12 percent were African American 23 percent were Latino 23 percent were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differences between our participants and all people held in IMU s at the time of our interviews People in the general prison population at the time of our interviews however were notably different than those held in IMU as they are older less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang -affiliated and less likely to be Latino
In this section we highlight six themes from our interviews with prisoners Each suggests areas where Washington DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU prisoners as well as areas wher e DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to prisoner well-being trust access to programs social contact policies health (both physical and mental) long-term management challenges and reentry
TRUSTING STA FF TO B E RESPONSIVE
A central theme of our interviews was that prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food care and safety Prisoners consistently expressed confidence that things like kites grievances and mail would be handled and delivered in good faith They understood processes for communicating needs and concerns and expected to receive timely (if not always
satisfactory) responses to their requests and Prisoners in WADOC frequently complaints Indeed when we asked prisoners if they described experiences of basic
trusted staff from correctional officers to healthcare procedural justice they understood providers they said things like ldquoI got a lot of respect for the rules trusted processes and themrdquo and ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo and ldquothey are just doing their mostly respected staff jobrdquo While prisoners did not describe staff as friends or
advocates neither did they describe them as enemies or opponents This is surprising In many prison settings in which our team has conducted research we have witnessed and documented
40
more adversarial relationships between prisoners and staff with less trust that policies and procedures will be followed devoid of respect expressed in simple phrases like ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo
To be clear prisoners frequently complained about the answers they received to kites the quality of medical care they received and the way some staff treated them But their complaints tended to focus on procedures and policies rather than on individual instances of mistreatment This suggests a baseline of trust in process The idea that rules are transparently knowable and fairl y appl ied is often called procedural justice people who experience procedural justice are more likely to pe rceive rules and institutions as legitimate and therefore to follow those rules and comply with institutional policies13 The baseline of trust ndash and associated perception of procedural justice ndash we documented among IMU prisoners reflects an existing infrastructure and institutional culture that can facilitate further reform like sharing new information and gaining buy -in for new policies and procedures
PROGRAMS ACCESS CHALLENGES AND UNREALIZED POTENTIAL
In our visits to IMUs across Washington over two years and in our conversations with prisoners and staff we learned about a dizzying arr ay of programs available to prisoners in the IMU A2A ACT chemical dependency reading groups and in-cell course work Although prisoners were often eager to participate in these programs both in order to make their IMU time productive and in order to fulfill the requirements for release from the IMU they were frustrated with long program waitlists Prisoners described wait times of six months or more in order to get into programs or courses they were required to take before leaving the IMU They under stood that a variety of factors contributed to these long wait times including time to be transferred to the
designated programming IMU limited Prisoners experienced waiting for I MU- number of seats available for each program based programs as extra punishment and program duration WADOC could communicate more clearly with prisoners about how programming For many participants waiting to get into waitlists are organized and how waiting programs was the most frustrating aspect of affects IMU stays and good time their housing in IMU because they
experienced the wait times as an extra punishment ndash one they feared would extend their overall time in prison ndash actually making the day-to-day conditions of their confinement harder to bear First prisoners worried that they were either losing good time while waiting for programming or receiving additional
13 Tom R Tyler ldquoProcedural Justice Legitimacy and the Effective Rule of Lawrdquo Crime amp J ustice Vol 30 283-357 (2003)
41
punishments by being ldquopushed bac krdquo onto longer wait lists As time spent in the IMU can impact prisonersrsquo early release dates long progr am wai t times wer e pe rceived as an e xtra punishment essentially adding to a prison sentence This is a place where DOC could build on the foundation of trust and procedural justice described in the prior section to simply communicate more clearly with prisoners about how waitlists are constructed and whether and how they are impacting good time and release dates
Second prisoners described the time waiting for programs as not just frustrating because it amounted to more time spe nt in the IMU and sometimes eve n more time in prison but also ldquotaxing mentallyrdquo They described waiting in the IMU as ldquodead time rdquo leaving one prisoner feeling like a ldquodog in a cage rdquo and another feeling ldquoanger all the timerdquo Yet another prisoner described doing the same set of packets three different times while waiting for a spot in face -to-face class like A2A
Once prisoners were able to enroll in programs they often found the content disappointing in specific ways too r epetitious (ldquothe same content over and over againrdquo) not compatible with daily life in the IMU and structured to prior itize a pragmatic attitude over a learning mindset One prisoner described this pragmatic mindset ldquoIf they put them in the Hole ndash they rsquore going to do their Hole time they rsquore going to their little program
WADOC has built an but theyrsquore going to do what they want to do Theyrsquore impressive infrastructure to already set in their ways and nothing rsquos really going to support IMU programming but change themrdquo And another explained ldquoThey force it the content of those programs
upon you which automatically makes an individual want could be improved to be more to rebel rdquo Prisoners also noted the tensions between relevant to IMU prisoners what programs teach and the challenges participants face in the general prison population For many the e mphasis on be havioral change clashed with a prison environment that hindered application of pro-social skills and strategies As one prisoner said ldquo But letrsquos be honest this isnrsquo t ndash it didnt help you didnrsquo t change you nonerdquo Another explained that people often made -up scenarios for role-playing interactions just to complete the program rather than actually engaging with real-life experiences and events
In addition to these general critiques of IMU programs as (1) prioritizing just getting through in order to get out of the IMU and (2) not acknowledging the everyday challenges of prison life prisoners described more specific shortcoming of curricula In some cases prisoners said they had to complete too much of the curriculum alone in their cells ldquoItrsquos meant to be a program where itrsquos supposed to be done with other people where you can sit in a group and talk And they have us do it in our cells So that right there itself I mean how does that work rdquo In other cases prisoners described the programs as loosely adapted from programs designed for juveniles in fact a number of participants had experienced the same curriculum while
42
incarcerated as juveni les Prisoners repeatedly expressed a hope that the curriculum could be more tailored to the adult setting Prisoners also noted that program materials were not always translated for non-English speakers or useful for prisoners who were illiterate In these instances programming was counterproductive to the goals of reform
While participants were critical of the programming they expressed this criticism in the context of wanting to use their IMU time productively being eager for classes and learning opportunities and appreciating the good- faith efforts of DOC in providing programming opportunities Indeed DOC is in a particularly positive position having developed the infrastructure for programming in the IMU the personnel to staff this space and even the interest among prisoners to take advantage of programming Figuring out how to get more meaningful content into this existing infrastructure should be relatively easy compared to the immense work that has already been done to build the infrastructure for and interest in programming among both prisoners and staff
SOCIAL CONTACT POLICIES
In the restrictive c onditions of the IMU one set of policies was both especially troubling to prisoners and especially likely to jeopardize their well-being during and after their IMU placements policy r estrictions on whom they could be in contact with while in the IMU and practical barriers to making contact with even those people on their permitted contact lists
Specifically prisoner s frequently told us that while in the IMU they were only permitted to receive visits from immediate family members parents siblings legal spouses and chi ldren Prisoners understood DOCrsquo s definition of family as excluding unwed partners children prisoners are participating in raisin g who were not legally or biologically their own close friends and other individuals playing important roles in prisonersrsquo lives While there may be
many valid security and management reasons for Prisoners experienced barriers to limiting visitation for IMU residents the immediate -communication ndash especially restricted family-only rules in the IMU impose additional visitation possibilities and limited
layers of isolation on prisoners who have no phone access ndash as some of the
immediate family those who have a strong hardest parts of doing IMU time Both connection with extended family members (eg prisonersrsquo mental health and their re-aunts uncles cousins) and those who have entry prospects deteriorate when
family ties and social bonds fray nurtured strong bonds with friends colleagues or mentors For instance one prisoner participant
who had been in foster care described his frustration with not being able to have a visit with a critical mentor ldquoI have a mentor from the streets who works in a non-profit center for LGBTQ people Hersquo s not my immediate relative so he canrsquo t come here to visit me rdquo Even when
43
prisoners had immediate family who we re e ligible to visit geographic di stance and une xpected lockdowns thwarted visitation plans T he prisoners we interviewed repeatedly identified visitation protocols and distance as two primary factors preventing face -to-face contact with support networks during periods of isolation
Indeed practical barriers including both the location of the IMUs a nd the challenges of regularly accessing the phone in the IMU also disrupted IMU residentsrsquo abilities to maintain connections with their outside support networks While prisoners on mainline may place a phone call throughout various hours each day ndash except for during count and meals ndash telephone access in the IMU is reduced to one hour five times a week during recreational time In the IMU this recreational time varies daily and might not occur at all on certain days of the week Even when prisoners did get into the yard they complained that the phones were unreliable a line would be dead or the person on the other end of the line would not be able to hear them for instance So a prisoner wishing to speak regularly even to an immediate family member l ike a child or spouse might not be able to maintain any kind of consistent communication As one participant described
When I was in isolation last time that put tension [on my marriage] My wife and I were used to having three phone calls a day and we were al ways se nding emails back and forth and getting contact visits on a weekly basis When I got [placed in solitary confinement] little by little I noticed that there was distance growing between us hellip My marriage didnrsquo t work out after that
These rule-based and practical barriers to social contact and the resulting frayed familial and social networks have documented consequences for prisonersrsquo well-being in and out of the IMU Among the random sample of prisoners we interviewed the weaker prisonersrsquo familial attachments the more likely they were to have mental health problems Of those prisoners who reported strong familial attachments only 15 percent had a history of self-harm But of those prisoners who did not report strong familial attachments 85 percent had a history of self -harm14 Indeed our analysis suggests that maintaining social bonds is critical to surviving time in the IMU Strong social bonds both allow prisoners to embody roles as part of social webs beyond that of ldquo convictrdquo and provide material and emotional support advocacy and psychological stability A robust body of social science confirms this finding docume nting how
14 To calculate this we linked histories of self-harm from BPRS and medical records (a yesno binary variable) to interview transcripts In coding in terview transcripts we identified those participants who had described having ldquostrongrdquo family b onds and m aintaining re gular family c ommunications and w e identified those participants who described having limited or no communication with family
44
social bonds facilitate successful re-entry after prison and l ong-term criminal desistance15 In sum facilitating the maintenance of existing social bonds for prisoners in the IMU will likely mitigate the mental health impacts of the restrictive conditions and facilitate more successful re-entry into the general prison population and society
One possible way to facilitate maintenance of social bonds could be through provision of tablets i n the IMU In fact in our year -two interviews prisoners described being able to communicate with the outside world ndash especially with JPAY players they had missed in the IMU ndash as the greatest form of freedom post-IMU During our second-year interviews with prisoners no longer in the IMU several participants we re even compelled to retrieve their JPAY players to show to us The player proved critical to re -entry facilitating immediate contact with prisonersrsquo friends and family Such communication was
IMU prisoners described JPAY players especially important for those whose loved ones as critical to easing their re-entry into lived out of state or could not visit in-person And the general prison population
the JPAY technology especially facilitated Providing some access to tablets in intergenerational communication with younger the IMU could mitigate some of the family members ndash like nieces and nephews ndash who frayed social bonds prisoners are less inclined to handwrite letters or talk on the describe experiencing there phone Former IMU prisoners described writing electronic messages sharing and saving photos and engaging in video calls By providing access to the outside world JPAY players gave prisoners an opportunity to reflect on process and express their experiences to those they cared about most As one participant explained ldquo Like itrsquos easier to text than write than actually ndash lsquo cause yoursquo re able to take a moment reflect on what you want to say than when yoursquore having a conversation So itrsquo s a lot easier It also builds relationshipsrdquo JPAY players were also a source of entertainment for prisoners in (re)constructing their daily routines Being able to listen to music or play games on their devices
15 Cochran JC ldquoBreaches in the wall Imprisonment social support and recidivismrdquo Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 512 (2014) 200-229 Cochran JC and Mears DP ldquoSocial isolation and inmate behavior A conceptual framework for theorizing prison visitation and guiding and assessing researchrdquo Journal of Criminal Justice 414 (2013) 252-261 Liu S Pickett JT and B aker T ldquoInside the black box Prison visitation the costs of offending and inmate social capitalrdquo Criminal Justice Policy Review 278 (2016) 766-790 Martinez DJ and Christian J ldquoThe familial relationships of former prisoners Examining the link between residence and informal support mechanismsrdquo Journal of Contemporary E thnography 382 (2009) 201-224 Mills A and Codd H ldquoPrisoners families and offender management Mobilizing social capitalrdquo Probation Journal 551 (2008) 9-24 Naser RL and La Vigne NG ldquoFamily support in the prisoner reentry process Expectations and realitiesrdquo Journal of Offender Rehabilitation 431 (2006) 93-106 Swanson C Lee CB Sansone FA and Tatum KM ldquoPrisonersrsquo perceptions of father-child relationships and social supportrdquo American Journal of Criminal Justice 373 (2012) 338-355 Wallace D Fahmy C Cotton L Jimmons C McKay R Stoffer S and Syed S ldquoExamining the role of familial support d uring prison and after r elease on post-incarceration mental healthrdquo International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 601 (2016) 3-20
45
helped break up the monotony as prisoners re -adjusted to general population Players also helped prisoners plan for the future whether org anizing their legal or other personal affairs
That said p risoners also described problems with JPAY players For many prisoners the costs of the players and video messaging were prohibitive (even if chea per than travel costs for in- person visits) P risoners who only took advantage of the JPAY kiosks wished for the increased communication with family and friends facilitated by an individual player JPAY expenses create inherent inequities in communication which are in turn likely to affect re -entry J PAY use is also contingent upon technological capacity For instance many participants shared stories of frustration and anxiety when they could not use their player after the prison Wi-Fi went down
In sum the communication and entertainment potentials of tablets make the devices valuable to prisoners adjusting to life outside of the IMU and might also repair social bonds otherwise frayed by IMU placements Acce ss costs and capacity however would have to be addressed in expanding the benefits of tablets to pr isoners during and post-IMU The use of JPAY players (or other tablets) during IMU placement is worth further consideration To be clear tablets are not an appropriate replacement for in- person visitation even in the IMU they simply have potential as an additional resource to further support the social contacts and bonds that mitigate the harms of restrictive housing
HEALTH
Our interviews with IMU prisoners and especially our systematic applica tion of the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale during these interviews established that time in the IMU has significant physical and mental health consequences for prisoners In two articles published in leading public health journals the American Journal of Public He alth and PLOS ONE we detail the mental and physical health consequences of IMU time we include those articles as Appendices D and E respectively and we summarize the fin dings here
First prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of psychiatr ic symptoms suicide attempts and incidents of self-harm and were more
We found high rates of serious mental health than twice as likely to have a serious problems in the IMU mental illness designation as prisoners in
bull 1 in 4 IMU prisoners had clinically significant the general prison population Our initi al symptoms of depression and anxiety sample of 106 participants had a mean bull 1 in 2 IMU prisoners had clinically significant BPRS rating of 37 and a median rati ng of psychiatric distress 33 (out of a possible range from 24 to bull IMU prisoners were 2x as likely as GP 168) suggesting mild psychiatric prisoners to have an SMI designation symptoms among the study population
46
at the time of our interviews Analysis of individual BPRS items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms Further analysis of BPRS factors (measuring 3-4 symptoms commonly associated with one another) as opposed to individual items provided additional evidence of clinically significant psychiatric distress in as much as half of the population sampled as with the depression-anxiety-guilt-somatization (DAGS) factor See Table 2 below for a summary of these findings Importantly the BPRS assesses only symptoms experienced in the last two weeks so BPRS scores may well undercount psychiatric symptoms experienced intermittently over longer periods
Administrative data support the finding of long-term psychological distress Among our respondents 19 percent had serious mental illness (SMI) designations 22 percent had a documented suicide attempt and 18 percent had documentation of other self-harm all at some point during their incarceration either before or during their time in the IMU Moreover respondents with SMI designations were more likely to report positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms than non-SMI respondents (See Table 3 in the AJPH article for more details) These findings support the validity of the BPRS assessments
Qualitative interview data revealed symptoms not otherwise captured by the BPRS and medical files Two classes of symptoms were reported by a majority of respondents toll of being in the IMU (80 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 359 times) and the psychological consequences of social isolation (73 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 192 times) Two additional symptoms were as prevalent as other clinically significant BPRS items like anxiety references to sensory hypersensitivity (16 of respondents mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Given these findings in year two follow-up interviews with prisoner participants we also included PC-PTSD-5 instrument questions to assess the prevalence and severity of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Within the month preceding the interview more than 40 percent of participants (44 of 79) indicated 3 or more symptoms of PTSD the baseline score for establishing a probable PTSD diagnosis As discussed further in the re-entry section below these symptoms of PTSD were closely linked to earlier experiences in the IMU
Second prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of physical health problems associated with their confinement in the IMU In 2017 15 percent of interview participants reported having clinically significant somatic concerns (concerns ldquoover present bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80 respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 percent reported clinically significant ratings of somatic concerns Of those who reported a clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were re-interviewed in 2018 25 percent indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic
47
concerns in 2018 Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 percent reported clinically significant somatic concerns compared to just 8 percent of those housed in the general prison population While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
Table 2 BPRS Symptom and Factor Prevalence 2017 and 2018
2017 (N=106) IMU 2018 (N=28) Non IMU 2018 (N=52) - Symptoms16 Depression 2450 2500 1538
(n=26) (n=7) (n=8) Anxiety 2450 3214 2885
(n=26) (n=9) (n=15) Somatic Concern 1510 2143 769
(n=16) (n=6) (n=4) Guilt 1790 1786 769
(n=19) (n=5) (n=4) Hostility 1130 1786 1731
(n=12) (n=5) (n=9) Hallucinations 940 1429 1154
(n=10) (n=4) (n=6) Excitement 1040 1429 769
(n=11) (n=4) (n=4) Factors17
Positive 1600 1790 1350
(n=17) (n=5) (n=7) Negative 470 360 380
(n=5) (n=1) (n=2) DAGS 4910 4290 4810
(n=52) (n=12) (n=25) Mania 1700 1430 1730
(n=18) (n=4) (n=9)
16 Only clinically significant symptoms (rating of 4 or higher) that were reported by 10 or more of the sample are presented 17 Factors combine 3-4 different symptoms commonly associated with one another Positive = hallucinations unusual thought content and conceptual disorganization Negative = blunted affect emotional withdrawal and motor retardation DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization Mania = elevated mood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement
48
concerns in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 percent confidence level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test)
Data from our 225 initial surveys collected from IMU prisoners also indicated high rates of concerns with physical health among the IMU population Of the 225 survey respondents 63 percent expressed health concerns 48 percent were taking medication 17 percent had arthritis and 8 percent had experienced a fall in solitary confinement And 82 percent replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo while in the IMU
Based on these high rates of reported concerns with physical health both among survey respondents and on the BPRS assessments of interview subjects we systematically analyzed all references to physical health concerns in the prisoner interview transcripts Through this analysis we identified three pervasive physical health concerns among IMU prisoners skin irritations weight fluctuations and musculoskeletal pain
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They understood these conditions as being directly associated with poor air and water quality irritating hygiene products and a lack of sun exposure inherent to IMU conditions of confinement Likewise participants described the interrelationship between a lack of nutritious food or adequate calories in the IMU feelings of lethargy and being too overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day and rapid weight fluctuations experienced during periods spent in the IMU Participants described their weight going down with regular and social exercise routines and going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exercise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations highlight the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU Finally participants spoke frequently about one specific chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to them in the IMU
In addition to specifying these physical health concerns participants described multiple barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU First prisoner respondents worried about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response if staff ultimately deemed
We found common patterns of physical health problems in the IMU bull Skin irritations bull Weight fluctuations bull Musculoskeletal pain
Barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU bull Fear of incurring more IMU time bull Lack of privacy bull $4 co-pay
49
their health issue to be non- emergent This fear prevented them from seeking care even when they were experiencing concern ing symptoms like heart palpitations Second prisoner respondents worried about the lack of privacy available to them if they sought or needed any form of healthcare needing to hand a medical kite to a correctional officer passing by needing to speak with a nurse at ldquocell-frontrdquo in e arshot of other s or submitting to a restrained ldquoescortrdquo to a medical treatment area The lack of privacy was a particular deterrent to seeking mental health care due to stigma around mental illness in prison and fear of b eing targeted by other prisoners as a result of their seeking mental health treatment Third prisoner respondents were dissuaded from seeking care by the $4 co-pay for a non-emergency medical appointment (for non-indigent prisoners) Because of IMU polici es capping overall prisoner spending for any need (whether healthcare food or toiletries) this $4 co-pay represented a larger proportion of their available money in the IMU than in the general population and so represented an additional barrier to seeki ng care from within the IMU Physical and mental health concerns in the IMU might be mitigated and reduced by addressing some of these barriers to IMU residents seeking and accessing care
LONG-TERM MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES IN TH E IMU
While we have focused in much of this section on common and prevalent experiences across our random sample of interview subjects a small subset of the people we interviewed had different experiences in the IMU and presented different challenges to DOC For instance we interviewed IMU pri soners who had re peatedly assaul ted staff repeatedly se riously harmed themselves or repeatedly committed serious rule violations as soon as they were released from the IMU in self-described efforts at sabotage In other words these prisoners r eflect a small group of those with ongoing or severe behavioral challenges DOC officials were actively engaged with following the behavioral trajectories of these prisoners meeting with them individually and investigating options to shorten their time in IMU This is laudable
Another population that presents serious long-Washington is well-positioned to pilot term management challenges for DOC are STG -and promote new initiatives focusing identified prisoners Among the random sample of on viable placement and programming
IMU prisoners we interviewed nearly one -third alternatives for IMU prisoners with (29 percent) had been in the IMU for at least one ongoing severe behavioral challenges year Of these more than half (55 percent) were
STG members or affiliates Of these three were awaiting out- of-state transfer due to ongoing serious STG-related activity Again these are small numbers of prisoners but they represent significant management challenges absorbing DOC time and resources and driving up key restrictive housing metrics like average lengths of stay frequency of cycling in and out of the IMU and the racial disproportionality of IMU placements (see Figures 8 and 9 above)
50
To date much solitary confinement reform nationwide has ignored such difficult cases focusing instead on the more widespread over-use of solitary confinement for prisoners who have not committed serious rule violations as with prisoners serving indefinite solitary confinement terms in California prisons due to gang status labels (prior to the Ashker reforms) or prisoners who have spent extended terms in solitary confinement for non-serious or single infractions Having successfully reduced IMU populations (albeit with some fluctuations) and lengths of IMU terms Washington is well-positioned to pilot and promote new initiatives focusing on viable placement and programming alternatives for IMU prisoners with ongoing severe behavioral challenges As Washington officials know too well no single solution is likely to address the wide range of behavioral challenges among those individuals who have experienced repeated extended IMU placements
One commonality we noticed among IMU ldquolong-termersrdquo was that they often felt they had nothing (more) to lose through misbehavior whether they had histories of serious violence against themselves or others To the extent Washington officials are able to provide hope and resources to these prisoners these prisonersrsquo calculations about the desirability of violence shift For instance providing one IMU prisoner with a nerf ball to throw another with soap to carve and scheduling weekly headquarter check-ins with a third at least anecdotally reduced misbehavior and violence In future research we look forward to further analyzing both these specific cases and broader DOC efforts to address individual and group behavioral challenges
RE-ENTRY
IMU prisoners overwhelmingly looked forward to being released back into the general prison population They associated re-entering the general population with improved access to clothing food hygiene products exercise programming and medical care And transitioning back to the general population offered opportunities to feel ldquohumanrdquo again ldquoWell it allows you to have contact It allows you to be human It allows you to see what people do on a daily basis that come from the field or to work and allow me to sub-act that Allowing you to copy what is considered humanrdquo
But re-entry came with challenges and anxieties too Prisoners reported significant difficulty readjusting to regular social contact upon leaving solitary confinement Transitioning to multiple-person housing or a particularly bustling unit is challenging to navigate after having extremely limited interactions with people for months or years Something as simple as shaking hands represents a significant amount of contact for someone just released from IMU Prisoners also develop different privacy expectations while in isolation which can make re-entry feel like a ldquothousand eyes are watching yourdquo Re-adjusting to life in general population also entailed a level of choice and personal
51
responsibility not typically exercised in isolation prisoners described the challen ges of anticipating transfer to a new location figuring out the day -to-day processes of their new unit and acclimating to the work and social norms of a new group of correctional staff and fellow prisoners Transitioning back into the general population with new norms and fewer restrictions disrupted the consistent (and sometimes rigid) routines prisoners had developed to manage their time in solitary confinement
BPRS and PTSD scores confirmed ongoing Mental health symptoms experienced challenges with the mental health problems in the IMU persisted after release prisoners experienced in the IMU For along with new symptoms indicative instance in year -two interviews of PTSD Former IMU prisoners
therefore face ongoing mental health respondents not in the IMU experienced needs and challenges higher rates of clinically significant anxiety
(as scored through the BPRS) than they had in the IMU (See Table 2 above) And prisoners in our study not in the IMU in year two frequently described extreme sensitivity to any amount of noise feeling overwhelmed by the amount of movement and stimulation they experience d in the general population intrusive thoughts (like triggered memories and flashbacks) and an inability to stop experiencing symptoms of guilt and blame Each of these experiences are consistent with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) While IMU p risoners were often just trying to make it through upon release back into the ge neral prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and physical challenges first experienced in the IMU The l ack of sensor y stimulation and social interaction in the IMU seemingly promotes rumination and fixation on traumatic disturbing or distressing memories and this rumination lingers even after leaving the IMU
One prisoner respondentrsquo s description of this constellation of symptoms which make the transition from the IMU to the general prison population difficult is representa tive
When you isolate us you kind of deprive us of those sensories everyday you know Like since Irsquove been here hellip Irsquo ve noticed like loud noise makes me feel I donrsquo t like it If therersquo s too much stuff going on I find myself I get all irritated If ther ersquos a l ot of people I ge t weirded out if the rersquos too much activity going on I kind of canrsquo t be around it Itrsquo s just it paranois me I donrsquot know why Itrsquo s only happened since Irsquo ve been in here this time I think itrsquo s because Irsquo ve been isolated for as long a s I have been Things that Irsquom not used to k ind of throws me through a loop
Likewise staff described how they observed these adjustment difficulties in prisoners leaving the IMU
52
I think theyrsquore uncomfortable being out of restraints around people hellip I donrsquot think they know what to do For example I used to watch them come out of IMU and in general population housing unit theyrsquod come to me and it would be strange for them to hellip have somebody walk up and say ldquoHey man howrsquos it goingrdquo and touch them Theyrsquore not used to people touching them hellip All that noise and all those people around them and having to share a cell with somebody and have somebody so close theyrsquore not used to that Those are effects of long-term restrictive housing I think they improve but ndash I mean Irsquove watched that happen over and over again
Prisoners contemplating release from the IMU not into the general prison population but instead onto the streets experienced significant anxiety about this looming transition As one prisoner described
Most people get released to the streets get a chance to go to hellip at least get out of the hole because they donrsquot want to release people to the streets from the hole because that causes safety risks For me they donrsquot have any options hellip My DOC officer is coming to pick me up itrsquos not like I wanted it to happen but hersquoll probably put me in handcuffs until I get to the office and actually wait to release me because until Irsquom out of their custody Irsquom still a security risk18
While we know DOC sought to ensure prisoners transitioned from the IMU into general population prior to release to the streets this was not possible in every case Understanding the challenges prisoners experience upon leaving the IMU and their anxieties about release are therefore especially important to designing transition and release plans
Our analysis shows that solitary confinement produces a unique cluster of mental health symptoms ndash including but not limited to cognitive decline anxiety depression hallucinations and PTSD19 Our interviews revealed an additional layer of difficulty for prisoners reentering the
18 While we sought to interview prisoners who had paroled between our year-one and year-two interviews we were not able to make contact with any of these individuals and so cannot systematically analyze actual experiences of release-to-the streets
19 Arrigo B A amp Bullock J L (2008) The psychological effects of solitary confinements on prisoners in supermax units Reviewing what we know and recommending what should change International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 52(6) 622-640 doi 1011770306624X07309720 Grassian S (2006) Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Washington Journal of Law amp Policy 22 325ndash383 Grassian S amp Friedman N (1986) Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confinement International Journal of
53
general prison population (and mainstream society) from the IMU The more time a person spends in solitary confinement the more difficult their transition back into the general prison population Importantly our analyses of rates of IMU placement in DOC (discussed in particular in the first findings section of this report on patterns in restrictive housing use) suggest that (1) large numbers of prisoners experience IMU placements during their stay in DOC and (2) many prisoners cycle in and out of the IMU This suggests that these long -term effects of IMU placements may be common if not pervasive among DOC prisoners
In sum prisoners described and sta ff observed common challenges transitioning from the IMU back into the general prison population or back onto the streets Still those prisoners who had spent extended periods of time (years rather than months) in the IMU but who were ulti mately able to transition back into the gene ral prison populati on descr ibed significantly impr oved quality of life and well-being in their new surroundings
For instance our team interviewed one prisoner who spent a total of one year in the IM U When our team re -interviewed this prisone r i n 2018 he was at a camp at the lowest security level in the system grateful for his ldquofreedom rdquo back in communication with his family and feeling ready for his looming release date (within the year of the interview ) ldquoEverythingrsquos turned around real fast from being in the cell to just being almost like out in the world Theyre just letting you know that Im getting closer and closer to finally getting outrdquo Our team interviewed another prisoner who spent a total of two years in the IMU during which time he had no contact with his family and had engaged in repeated serious self-harm resulting in multiple surgeries When our team re -interviewed this prisoner in 2018 he was living in the general prison population with a cellmate had re -established a relationship with his young daughter While prisoners face ongoing mental
and her mother and had not engaged in self-harm health needs following IMU stays
in months many also appreciate increased family connections exhibit better behavior
In many cases prisoners pointed to a specific staff and experience overall improvements member who had gotten to know them expressed in well-being after leaving the IMU concern for their well-being and advocated for targeted interventions like family contact or transitional programs to facilitate transitioning out of the IMU Such targeted individualized treatment interventions often coordinated by Program Managers at the institution- level or the Mission Housing Administrator from
Law and P sychiatry 8(1) 49-65 Haney C amp Lynch M (1997) Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and so litary c onfinement New York Review of Law and Social Change 23 101-195
54
headquarters were critical to intervening to get some of the longer-term IMU prisoners back into the general prison population For instance one Program Manager said
I follow up with all of my offenders When they leave and go to the other institution after theyrsquove been out of here for three months Irsquoll go and visit them at their other institutions and see how theyrsquore doing Wersquove had a couple thatrsquove gone through the program twice and a lot of people are looked down on that and go lsquoOh if they didnrsquot learn the first time why is he going to learn a second timersquo Well hey it might take somebody four or five times before they get it Especially if theyrsquore between that 28 to 38 age range
Likewise the Mission Housing Administrator who follows individual maximum-custody IMU placements throughout the entire Washington DOC system noted ldquoWe have hundreds of success stories of people who have gotten out of IMUsrdquo He said he ldquoget(s) calls from moms every once in awhilerdquo thanking him for giving their sons a chance by letting them out of the IMU And he added he has ldquoa drawer full of letters from people saying thank yourdquo
Such stories stand as important reminders that even prisoners once thought to be unmanageable can improve outside of the IMU and learn to thrive in our communities even in spite of the many documented mental health challenges associated with having spent time in solitary confinement
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021
While data collection for this research project formally concluded in 2018 reform efforts within Washington DOC continued The Mission Housing Administrator continued to oversee all cases of long-term maximum custody IMU placements and to develop individualized interventions ndash from regular phone calls and exchanges of letters to facilitating more family contact ndash to assist in transitioning people out of the IMU Between 2018 and 2020 Washington DOC partnered with the Vera Institute of Justice to pursue further restrictive housing reform (and also joined a partnership with AMEND to improve overall correctional culture)20 In 2021 Vera Institute reported that overall restrictive housing use decreased by nearly ten percent between 2018
20 See PRESS RELEASE The Washington State Department of Corrections Partners with the Vera Institute to Focus on Restricted Housing Reforms May 16 2019 httpswwwdocwagovnews201905162019phtm
55
and 2020 and average and medium lengths of stay in IMU on maximum custody status decreased significantly by 18 and 33 percent respectively 21
Although the onset of COVID in early 2020 set som e of Washington DOC continues these restrictive housing reduction efforts back Washingt on to develop and implement DOC continues to implement additional reforms designed to strategies to reduce reliance
(1) further reduce reliance on restrictive housing on restrictive housing and (eliminating the sanction of disciplinary segregation improve conditions of shortening the maximum time in administrative segregation confinement in IMUs from 47 to 30 days implementing ldquoearned time creditsrdquo for
people assigned to maximum custody and piloting new hearings processes to divert ser iously mentally ill prisoners from restrictive housing ) and (2) improve conditions of confinement within restrictive housing units (increasing out- of-cell time implementing plans to t rack these increases through a program called Pipe permitting a broader range of visitors beyond immediate family and notifying emergency contacts when prisoners are placed in restrictive housing) In addition to these reforms Washington DOC has been and plans to continue ldquore -purposingrdquo IMU units for other less restrictive ldquomissionsrdquo like ldquosafe harborrdquo units for gang dropouts transition units for people moving between IMU and general population and a potential unit for people with traumatic brain injur ies As the Mission Housing Administrator said ldquowe are trying to take r estrictive housing beds away so they canrsquo t be filledrdquo 22
DOC has also been working to address IMU staff concerns DOC established a Steering Committee in 2018 including line staff m ental health professionals and correctional managers to help to develop and implement IMU -related policies By including line staff t his Committee directly addresses staff desi res documented in this repor t to be hear d and to have more input in IMU -related policy decisions In addition DOC developed a training handbook especially for IMU staff and now requires staff with IMU posts to complete a training program associated with this handbook within 6 months of beginning work in an IMU In sum DOC has
21 Rachel Friedrich ldquoWashington Corrections Continues Restrictive Housing Reformsrdquo Oct 28 2020 httpswwwdocwagovnews202010282020htm see a lso Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author)
22 See Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author) conversation with Tim Thrasher Feb 19 2021 (notes on file with author)
56
laid a strong groundwork from which to continue to implement many of the recommendations identified in the executive summary to this report
57
APPENDICES
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL
Legend 5 MaxIMU 4 OthIMU 3 Max SOUITP 2 Max Other
1 GP 0 UNK
IMU SOU CBCC OTH FIELD UNK PRISON
4 MAX 5 3 3 2 0 0
CUSTODY 3 CLO 4 1 1 1 1 1
LEVEL 2 MED 4 1 1 1 1 1
1 OTH 4 1 1 1 1 1
0 UNK 4 0 0 0 0 0
G17 Custody Population by Index Location and Custody Level
IMU SOU CBCC OTH PRISN FIELD UNK TOTALS
4 MAX 342 30 22 18 0 0 412
CUSTODY 3 CLO 77 56 400 988 32 0 1553
LEVEL 2 MED 103 74 43 3441 43 0 3704
1 OTH 69 149 16 10811 550 0 11595
0 UNK 12 0 0 470 146 51 679
TOTALS 603 309 481 15728 771 51 17943
58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020
1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020
Local RH Units AHCC
CRCC
TRU
WCCW
WSR-3a
WSR-3
WSP-4
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
0
80
101
64
0
0
40
0
80
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
0
0
40
0
0
0
Local RH Units Total
397 397 325 285 273 172 172 142
IMUs (Ad Seg Beds) CBCC-IMU
MCC-IMU
MICC-IMU
SCCC-IMU
WCC-IMU
WSP-IMU (N)
WSP-IMU (S)
CRCC IMU
124(62)
0
64(0)
0
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
100(100)
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
100(70)
IMUs Total 408 552 552 952 888 888 740 770
Sum Local RH + IMUs
805 949 877 1237 1163 1060 912 912
59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE
See next page
60
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher-Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Journal Justice Quarterly
Manuscript ID RJQY-2020-0181R2
Manuscript Type Original Article
Keywords Restrictive housing Solitary confinement Gangs Prison
The Version of Record of this manuscript has been published and is available in Justice Quarterly published online Dec 21 2020 httpsdoiorg1010800741882520201853800
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
Page 1 of 29 Justice QuarterlyTable 1 Washington DOC Population Characteristics 2002-2017
Cohort 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Age at Snapshot (in Years) 18 to 25 21 19 17 16 13 11 26 to 35 33 33 32 34 35 34 36 to 45 29 29 28 25 26 27 Over 45 17 20 23 25 27 28
Gender Female 7 8 8 8 8 8
Male 93 92 92 93 92 92 RaceEthnicity
White Non-Hispanic 60 63 62 60 61 60 Black Non-Hispanic 21 19 19 19 18 18
Hispanic 12 10 11 12 13 14 OtherUnknown 7 8 9 9 9 9
Most Serious Offense at Conviction Violent Non-Sex 41 42 44 46 46 48
Sex 17 17 20 20 20 19 Property 15 17 18 19 20 19
DrugOther 25 23 18 15 14 13 Missing 2 1 0 0 0 0
Sentence Length (in Months) Mean 879 891 948 998 1017 1009
Standard Deviation 1048 1071 1121 1173 1204 1246 Gang Affiliation by RacialEthnic STG
White 5 5 6 6 5 5 Black 9 9 9 10 10 10
Hispanic 4 5 6 8 9 9 Other 1 1 2 2 2 2
No Gang Affiliation 81 80 78 75 74 74
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17308 17288 17625 17943 Source Authorsrsquo Calculations Washington State Department of Corrections
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
For Peer ReviewOnly
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
350
Justice Quarterly Page 2 of 29
Figure 1 Percentage Change in IMU-Max Population IMU-Max Length of Stay (LOS) and Total Prison Population (Indexed at 2002) Washington DOC 2002-2017
100
150
200
250
300
Perc
enta
ge C
hang
e fr
om 2
002
50
0 2002
(=100) 2005 2008
Snapshot Year 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max Population IMU-Max LOS Total Prison Population
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
48495051525354555657585960
1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647
Page 3 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Table 2 Solitary Confinement in Washington State 2002-2017
2002 Num
Custody amp Confinement Level IMU-Max 149 09
IMU-AdDSeg 105 07 Max-Tx 18 01
Other-Max 34 02 General Population 15499 974
Out of StateUnknown 102 06
2005 Num
228 14 144 09 50 03 55 03
16270 965 105 06
Cohort 2008 2011
Num Num
338 20 472 27 337 19 177 10 44 03 35 02 11 01 27 02
16438 950 16440 951 140 08 137 08
2014 Num
283 16 291 17 42 02 20 01
16893 958 96 05
2017 Num
342 19 260 14 52 03 18 01
17121 954 150 08
Total IMU Total Maximum Custody
254 201
16 13
372 333
22 20
675 393
39 23
649 534
38 31
574 345
33 20
602 412
34 23
Cumulative Days Spent in IMU (Any Custody Status)dagger
Mean (St Dev) 431 (2115) 476 (2303) 562 (2568) 746 (3027) 804 (3271) 824 (3300)
Not placed in IMU 1-45 days
46-90 days 91-365 days
366 days or more (gt1 year) At least 1 day in IMU
12062 2128 499 728 490
3845
758 134 31 46 31 242
12673 2344 487 755 593
4179
752 139 29 45 35 248
12533 2606 583 890 695
4774
724 151 34 51 40 276
12120 2535 610
1041 981
5167
701 147 35 60 57 299
11863 2854 810
1050 1048 5762
673 162 46 60 59 327
11847 2985 928
1075 1108 6096
660 166 52 60 62 340
Days in IMU by Custody and Confinement Level Mean (St Dev)
IMU-Max IMU-AdDSeg
2270 1147
(1362) (1246)
3060 1169
(2392) (1212)
2839 906
(1929) (1169)
3477 1278
(2732) (1385)
3258 664
(3167) (779)
2140 709
(1296) (796)
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17307 17287 17625 17943
Source Authorsrsquo calculations Washington State Department of Corrections Changes in the use of local segregation for disciplinary and administrative purposes (outside of IMUs for prisoners classified lower than Max Custody) likely affect the counts of IMU-AdDSeg populations particularly in early cohort years Total IMU is the sum of all prisoners living in IMU units on July 1st including (i) IMU-Max those on maximum custody housed in IMUs and (ii) IMU-AdDSeg those who are housed in IMUs on lower custody levels including administrative segregation disciplinary segregation and awaiting hearings Total Maximum Custody consists of three groups all classified as maximum custody (i) those housed in IMUs (IMU-Max) (ii) those in SOU or ITP units (Max-Tx) and (iii) those located elsewhere (Other-Max) dagger Days spent in IMU represents cumulative days spent in IMU until the snapshot date for all prisoners regardless of custody classification during their current prison admission
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Justice Quarterly Page 4 of 29Table 3 Comparison of IMU-Max and General Prison Populations Washington DOC 2002-2017
Cohort 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2 IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen 3 Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop4
Background Characteristics 6 Age at Snapshot (Years) 7 18 to 25 36 21 24 19 31 16 24 15 19 13 20 11 8 9
26 to 35 36 to 45
40 17
33 29
40 22
32 29
43 15
32 29
45 18
34 26
41 20
34 26
47 20
34 27
11 Over 45 7 17 13 20 12 23 13 25 19 27 13 29 12 RaceEthnicity13 14
Black Non-Hispanic Hispanic
19 20
21 11
16 22
19 10
15 30
19 10
20 29
19 12
14 37
18 12
17 27
18 13
16 OtherUnknown 13 7 8 8 6 9 7 9 5 9 9 9 17 White Non-Hispanic 48 60 55 63 49 62 44 61 44 62 47 60 18 Most Serious Offense at 19 Conviction
21 22
Violent Non-Sex Sex
68 15
41 17
66 14
42 17
70 9
43 20
74 11
45 21
78 8
45 20
75 7
48 20
23 Property 8 16 10 17 14 19 11 19 10 20 11 20 24 DrugOther 9 25 9 23 7 18 4 16 4 14 7 13
Missing26 Age of First Conviction
1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 (Years)28 29 Under 18
18 to 25
12 69
4 45
9 69
3 45
10 69
3 45
10 65
3 46
8 67
3 46
8 69
3 45
31 Over 25 20 51 22 52 21 52 25 51 25 51 23 52 32 In-Prison Behavioral Profile 33 Gang Affiliation by34 RacialEthnic STG
36 37
White Black
14 22
4 9
21 14
5 9
20 12
5 9
15 14
5 10
15 11
5 10
14 16
4 10
38 Hispanic 21 4 22 4 39 5 33 7 40 8 32 8 39 Other 3 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 4 2 4 2
41 No Gang Affiliation 40 81 43 81 28 79 36 76 31 75 33 76
42 Annual Infraction Rate 43 44 Mean 83 13 51 11 53 11 42 10 47 10 49 11
St Dev 76 24 78 18 54 20 49 17 59 18 67 19 46 Violent Infractions 47 48 Mean 40 05 33 04 33 05 30 05 33 05 30 05
49 St Dev 58 15 45 14 42 15 40 16 43 16 34 16 Staff Assaults
51 52 53
Mean St Dev
12 33
01 04
07 22
00 04
07 20
00 04
07 21
01 05
08 25
01 05
06 20
01 05
54 Total Population 149 15499 228 16270 338 16438 472 16440 283 16893 342 17121
56 Source Authors calculations Washington State Department of Corrections 57 Statistically significant differences between IMU-Max and General Population (Gen Pop) at plt001 (for categorical chi square for 58 numeric t-test) 59
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Page 5 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher -Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Abstract This article presents a rare longitudinal analysis of solitary confinement use in one state prison system spanning 2002-2017 in the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) An ongoing partnership with DOC officials facilitated methodological and conceptual improvements allowing us to construct a dataset that provides a rich description of who is in solitary confinement for how long and why Operationalizing solitary confinement as the intersection of the most serious custody status with the most restrictive housing location we describe significant changes in ethnic composition and behavioral profiles of people in solitary confinement and in frequency and duration of solitary confinement use These results suggest how particular policy interventions have affected the composition numbers and lengths of stay in solitary confinement Combining longitudinal analysis and iterative engagement with DOC officials we provide a roadmap for better understanding solitary confinement use in the United States now and in the future
Tens of thousands of prisoners across the United States experience solitary confinement
annually (ASCA-Liman 2015 2018 Beck 2015) Prisoners generally spend no more than an
hour per day outside of cells the size of a wheelchair-accessible bathroom stall and eat cold
meals alone with limited access to natural light phones family visits or any human touch
Prisoners live not days but months and years under such conditions In tandem with mass
incarceration the use of solitary confinement expanded drastically across the United States in the
1980s and 1990s often in modern hyper-secure ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities (Reiter 2016 Riveland
1999 Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Though integral to incarceration since the prison was ldquobornrdquo and
perpetually controversial (Foucault 1977 Haney amp Lynch 1997 Smith 2006 Rubin amp Reiter
2018) solitary confinement has come under renewed scrutiny in the last decade (Reiter 2018
ASCA-Liman 2015) Federal and state correctional systems have begun to experiment with
mitigation and alternative programs Here we focus on a 15-year period during which the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) attempted to confront these issues and ask
whether and how a prison system might reduce its use of solitary confinement
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Justice Quarterly Page 6 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
The question of whether a prison system might change direction including how the
practice of solitary confinement might be constrained has animated criminological scholarship
over decades (eg Jacobs 1977 Liebling 1999 Petersilia 1991 Rhodes 2004 Reiter 2016
Rubin amp Reiter 2018) A longitudinal quantitative dataset with which to assess these questions
however is rare Our dataset analyzed in collaboration with practitioner partners allows us to
look both at individual faFor Peer Review Only ctors such as how many gang members with violent infraction histories
are placed in solitary confinement for how long in any given year and at institutional factors
including demographic shifts and policy changes which influence behavioral patterns (Toch
1977 Liebling 1999 Toch amp Adams 1989 Haney 2018)
Where scholars have used point-in-time datasets to examine the relationship between
individual and institutional factors in understanding the use and effects of solitary confinement
controversies abound over how to define and operationalize the practice (Kurki amp Morris 2001
Naday et al 2008 Mears et al 2019 Reiter 2016) We identify which prisoners are subjected
to the aversive conditions described above in terms of two factors 1) whether they are living in
units engineered to lock them down (location) and 2) the rules governing how long they stay
their conditions of confinement and movement (custody status) Here these measurement
principles are applied to a rich administrative dataset to ask 1 Who is in solitary confinement
for how long and why 2 How if at all do their individual characteristics including ethnicity
gang status and b ehavioral profiles change over time 3 What patterns emerge from this
analysis We show how the distribution and extent of solitary confinement use in Washington
has shifted with institutional vicissitudes in demographics capacity gang management policies
programming and classification systems
Trajectories of Solitary Confinement Placement
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Page 7 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Estimates of how many people experience solitary confinement annually range from
68000 prisoners to 18 of all prisoners in the United States or over 250000 people (ASCA-
Liman 2015 Beck 2015) To address definitional debates underlying conflicting estimates
Mears et al recently suggested a four-dimensional conceptual framework ndash goal duration
quality and intentionality ndash to describe the constellation of factors that make up solitary
confinement (or ldquorestric
o define solitary confinement a
conceptually and et
For Peer Review Only tive housingrdquo) practices (2019 1434) The operational focus of our
alternative approach allows us to bypass arguments about how t
hically controversial practice Rather our operational definition applies the
near-universal correctional functions of classification and movement to identify the sites and
subjects of solitary confinement from correctional tracking records These methods permit
consistent robust a nalyses of who is subjected to solitary confinement and the association of this
experience with institutional misconduct and other factors
Previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions about whether solitary confinement
has a disparate impact on groups defined by race or ethnicity Studies focusing on patterns in
disciplinary infractions and solitary confinement placements over four to six years tend to find
minimal disparities (Cochran et al 2018 Tasca amp Turanovic 2018) while point-in-time
comparisons of demographics of solitary confinement units with general population units
consistently find non-white prisoners over-represented in solitary confinement (Schlanger 2012
Reiter 2012) A recent study analyzed a survey that asked state prison systems to self-report
solitary confinement and gang-affiliated populations prisoners classified as gang members were
over-represented in solitary confinement across the United States (Pyrooz amp Mitchell 2019)
The study does not m ention race but others have noted the longstanding ties between race and
gangs in US prisons (Berger 2014 Bloom amp Martin 2013 Reiter 2016) strengthening Pyrooz
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Justice Quarterly Page 8 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and Mitchellrsquos recommendation to ldquointegrate measures of gang affiliation into correctional
researchrdquo (2019 22) as we do in our analysis
The relationship between solitary confinement and institutional order is also contested (eg
Briggs Sundt and Castellano 2003 Lovell Johnson amp Cain 2007) One recent study among
men in a three-year cohort in a mid-western DOC found that disciplinary segregation was
associated with a greater probability of misconduct (Labrecque amp Smith 2019) but another
study among men in a two-year cohort in the Oregon DOC found that disciplinary segregation
was not a significant predictor of subsequent institutional misconduct (Lucas amp Jones 2017)
Our dataset permits an evaluation of longer-term patterns of misconduct in and out of solitary
settings
One recent study expanded the usual short periods of analysis described in preceding studies
about both race and misconduct using nearly a decade (1987-96) of data from Kansas a prison
system small enough (5-7000 prisoners) to allow tracing of bed-level data to examine individual
correlates of solitary confinement placement such as race and also patterns in frequency and
duration of solitary confinement over time (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Our study takes an even
broader scale approach examining populations in and out of solitary confinement over 15 years
with 15000 or more prisoners per cohort following particular individuals and groups over
decades of criminal and correctional history
Attending to broader institutional forces at play over our study period is critical to our
approach Lynch recently argued that in studies of sentencing findings are often
ldquooperationalized as a single end-stage outcome that is unmoored from the social organizational
and institutional forces that help produce a class of defendants to be sentencedrdquo (2020 1159)
This critique could just as readily be applied to studies of solitary confinement (eg Cochran et
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Page 9 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
al 2018 Logan et al 2017) in which disparities in outcomes and differences in personal and
behavioral characteristics of prisoners are analyzed with limited attention to institutional patterns
such as fluctuations in bed capacity shifts in demographic make-up and reforms or
retrenchments in policies governing solitary confinement placement and release Our
longitudinal dataset allows us to generate individual-level and aggregate statistics on histories
and outcomes during incarceration and to place findings in the context of broader institutional
forces shaping those patterns
The administrative dataset analyzed here was collected as part of a multi-method project also
using ethnographic interview and archival data to evaluate solitary confinement use over time
in Washington (DOC) (Reiter et al 2020) This project extends a decades-long collaborative
relationship between researchers and DOC first between the University of Washington (UW)
and DOC through the Mental Health Collaboration (Allen et al 2001) later in a UW-led multi-
method systematic survey of Washingtonrsquos solitary confinement population in 1999-2000
(Lovell et al 2000 Rhodes 2004 Lovell 2008) and finally in this study replicating and
extending the 2000 study in collaboration with an original member of both previous studies
In rates of overall incarceration and solitary confinement use Washington DOC is below
average it has the 12th lowest rate of incarceration among the states (Kaeble amp Cowhig 2018)
and as of 2018 its reported proportion of population in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo (23) was half the
national average (45) (ASCA-Liman 2018 13)1 In terms of willingness to collaborate with
researchers however Washington DOC is above average current and former DOC leadership
have agreed there are knowledge gaps around solitary confinement invited scholars and
advocates alike to analyze and critique policies in order to address these gaps and participated
actively in collaborations both facilitating access to the administrative data underlying the
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Justice Quarterly Page 10 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
analyses presented here and helping to interpret results In particular Eldon Vail and Dan
Pacholke nationally recognized correctional policy experts led Washington DOC during part of
our study period and consulted with us on interpretation of findings
Research about solitary confinement use has been produced through practitioner-researcher
collaborations in a number of states including Colorado (OrsquoKeefe et al 2011) Florida (Mears
amp Bales 2009) Kansas (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) and Oregon (Pyrooz et al 2020) Few
however have attempted the quantitative and qualitative depth of this project which is more
comparable to the New York studies of Toch and colleagues (eg Toch amp Adams 1989 Toch
1977) conducted as the new ldquosupermaxrdquo era was coming upon us in the 1980s or the California
studies by Petersilia on re-entry and community supervision (eg Petersilia 2009) Ours
represents an intergenerational academic-practitioner collaboration spanning both eras
Data and Methods
This analysis draws on a longitudinal administrative record set of the entire DOC
population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and
2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of admissions and
releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12 million) infractions
(630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) Discussions with DOC research office
partners about how best to meet the data needs of our study exemplifying our academic-
practitioner collaboration led to two major expansions of the scope and power of this dataset
First to assess how solitary confinement populations had changed since the 2000 UW study
we requested archival information on prisoners in any form of solitary confinement on our
snapshot dates Lacking ready capacity to identify these prisoners DOC offered to provide data
for all prisoners in custody on these dates leaving it to us to identify who was in solitary
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Page 11 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
confinement and when Our willingness to pick our own apples from the DOC data tree led to a
30-fold expansion of our subject pool permitting longitudinal comparisons between solitary
confinement and general population prisoners Second DOC provided us all Washington prison
sentences in the entire history of prisoners in our vastly expanded dataset rather than only the
index offense data we had requested Although information about currently active convictions
accompanies prisoners as they move through DOC retrospectively retrieving links between court
and correctional records is complicated by the multiplicity of charges sentencing policies and
admission statuses that may apply Recognizing a systematic problem when we showed them a
pattern of missing data DOC provided the entire prison conviction history for the 57000 prisoners
in our expanded subject population allowing us both to identify the most serious current offense
and to provide a consistent measure of prisonersrsquo criminal histories
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying uniform coding procedures to
compile event-level data into a subject-level dataset We computed the facility location and
custody status of every prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at
each location and subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as
infractions Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and
plausible counts and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all
prisoners in six snapshot cohorts We also use some inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-
tests) in the analyses we present to test for differences across cohorts and groups
Terminology In Washington DOC policy (2020 320250) maximum custody status is the
highest level of custody classification Maximum custody prisoners are assessed in formal
hearings to pose a sufficient risk to safety ndash whether their own or others ndash to warrant holding
them for an extended period in a maximum-security location isolated by architecture procedure
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Justice Quarterly Page 12 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and staffing As legal expert Fred Cohen notes maximum custody is a risk-based classification
justified as a preventive measure rather than a punitive sanction (2008) In Washington DOC
prisoners first enter solitary confinement through short-term administrative segregation (Ad-
Seg) placements usually awaiting adjudication following an infraction Infraction of a specific
prison rule may result in a disciplinary hearing and the sanction of a disciplinary segregation (D-
Seg) placement Alternatively multiple infractions other behavior patterns or an extended stay
in administrative segregation may lead to a re-classification as maximum custody (Max)
In DOC Intensive Management Units (IMUs) are the most secure housing facilities The
term ldquosupermaxrdquo is not a category of institution in DOC instead the state has five IMUs located
at Clallam Bay Corrections Center (CC) Monroe CC Washington CC (ldquoSheltonrdquo) Stafford
Creek CC and the Washington State Penitentiary (called Walla Walla or the ldquoconcrete mamardquo
(Hoffman amp McCoy 2018)) IMUs feature distinct security perimeters with advanced
technology for controlling entrances gates and doors strict procedures for prisoner movement
and no normal occasions for prisoners to share space with others unless shackled Though exact
conditions (like cell size and degree of access to natural light) vary across IMUs the uniformly
restrictive conditions impose intense isolation (often for extended periods of time) comparable to
conditions in other state supermaxes IMUs are adjacent to the ldquomain institutionrdquo (a correctional
center or complex may have multiple facilities or stand-alone buildings sharing a common
Superintendent) to allow escorting prisoners on foot without delay As a Lieutenant at Shelton
said during a prison visit ldquoNothing happens fast around here except going to the IMUrdquo
Transfers between facilities are recorded in DOCrsquos movement records allowing us to
identify who was placed in IMUs and for how long Transfers in and out of cells within a facility
however are recorded as housing changes likely 50 million in number for our subjects vastly
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Page 13 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
exceeding our and DOCrsquos ability to retrieve and compile absent unlimited resources2 Therefore
inter-facility movement records in our data do not capture prisoners isolated on Ad-Seg or D-Seg
status (AdDSeg status) inside a main institution Importantly AdDSeg prisoners who were
living under comparably stringent conditions as IMU-Max prisoners in two decrepit segregation
units within the main institutions at two of Washingtonrsquos oldest prisons ndash Walla Walla and
Monroe ndash are not captured in our data These two units with a combined capacity of 250 closed
in 2011 but were replaced (and then some) by 200 new IMU beds at each prison Our inability
to identify all such AdDSeg prisoners through movement records requires caution in how the
terms ldquoIMUrdquo versus ldquosolitary confinementrdquo are used in our findings Because of this limitation
we center our trend and comparative analyses on the maximum custody group who are reliably
identified over the entire course of our study period and whose long-term presence in maximum
security settings raises the sharpest ethical issues (Lovell 2014)
Results
To contextualize findings on the size and characteristics of Washingtonrsquos solitary
confinement population we first describe overall patterns in the state prison population between
2002 and 2017 Table 1 displays counts and demographic crime type sentence length and gang
affiliation characteristics for the entire prison population incarcerated on each of the six snapshot
dates Washington Statersquos prison population grew by 13 despite changes in sentencing policy
(SHB2338 2002) that were expected to reduce imprisonment by lessening penalties and
providing treatment alternatives for drug-related offenses The proportion of prisoners
incarcerated for drug or other offenses declined substantially while those incarcerated for
violent non-sexual offenses increased by nearly 17 between 2002 and 2017 (plt001)3
Reflecting the shift toward more violent offenses average sentence lengths increased
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Justice Quarterly Page 14 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
significantly as did the average age of prisoners The proportion of Hispanic prisoners increased
by 17 while the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners decreased by 16 (plt001) and
White non-Hispanic representation remained stable4
Affiliation with security threat groups (STG) or prison gangs increased as well in 2017
over one in four prisoners (26) was identified as a member of an STG up from 19 in 2002
The growth of gang affiliation was not equally distributed across racial and ethnic groups5
While rates of gang affiliation for White non-Hispanic prisoners remained relatively low over
the fifteen-year period gang affiliation among prisoners of color increased substantially
between 2002 and 2017 the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners classified as gang-
affiliated rose from 35 to 41 for Hispanic prisoners from 28 to 53 a sharp increase with
substantial consequences for solitary confinement practices
[TABLE 1 NEAR HERE]
Disentangling the Solitary Population Table 2 presents trends in solitary confinement use by
both custody status (classification) and location (facility) We distinguish four groups either
classified at the highest custody level (Maximum labeled ldquoMaxrdquo) or located in the most
restrictive locations (IMUs) At the center of our analysis are prisoners both classified Max and
housed in IMUs (denoted by IMU-Max) Next are prisoners who have not been reclassified
Max but are housed in IMUs for administrative or disciplinary segregation (IMU-AdDSeg)
Third for treatment purposes some Max prisoners are housed at the Special Offender Unit
(SOU) at Monroe designed to address serious behavioral health needs or at the Inmate
Transitional Pod (ITP) at Clallam Bay a program-focused unit for prisoners transitioning out of
solitary confinement (denoted by Max-Tx) Finally a residual group of Max prisoners could not
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Page 15 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
For Peer Review Only
be assigned a facility type because on the snapshot date they were on hospital or court release
or awaiting transfers to an IMU SOU or ITP (Other-Max)6
Solitary confinement use (in IMU-Max IMU-AdDseg and Total IMU) far outpaces
population growth over our study period in the state growing at least 130 (in IMU-Max)
compared to a 13 growth in the state prison population As explained earlier IMU-Max
represents a clearly defined population with reliable snapshot counts for prisoners subjected to
long-term solitary confinement over the entire study period but it excludes prisoners in AdDSeg
either in the IMU or in other within-facility units not identifiable in the between-facility
movement records we analyze Figure 1 illustrates differences in rates and patterns of growth in
IMU-Max and total prison populations accompanied by changes in average length of stay (LOS)
for the IMU-Max group on their snapshot date assignments
[TABLE 2 amp FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE]
One-day counts capture those physically held in IMUs on snapshot dates and demonstrate
that a small but increasing proportion of Washingtonrsquos prison population was held in solitary
confinement across snapshots in both IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg groups One-day counts
however do not account for movement in and out of IMUs at other points To better understand
both the prevalence and duration of placement in solitary we used event-level movement
information to calculate the cumulative amount of time each prisoner spent in solitary
confinement from admission to snapshot date Over the study period a majority of prisoners in
DOC in each snapshot cohort were never placed in solitary confinement but a substantial and
growing proportion of prisoners had spent time in these units The proportion of prisoners
spending at least one day in an IMU between their prison admission and snapshot dates had
increased from 242 in 2002 to 34 in 2017 Prisoners in 2002 spent an average of 6 weeks in
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Justice Quarterly Page 16 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
IMUs from admission to snapshot by 2017 time spent in IMU increased significantly to an
average of 12 weeks (plt001) Changes in mean values are skewed by a few outliers who have
spent their entire (long or life) prison sentences in an IMU beginning decades before and
extending through the study period To counter the skew we binned cumulative days in IMU
into distinct groups 0 days 1-45 days 46-90 days 91 days to 1 year and over 1 year7
Pooling across all cohorts we find that more than half of those who spent at least one day in
an IMU stayed for between 1 and 45 days cumulatively The second largest group (186)
cumulatively spent between three months and one year in solitary confinement and a substantial
proportion (165) of those placed in an IMU spent more than one year there The changing
distribution of cumulative time spent in IMUs reinforces the finding that average time spent in
solitary increased over the study period More prisoners spent at least one day in IMU and
proportions of prisoners in each cumulative length of stay group increased substantially led by
those spending between 46 and 90 days and those spending more than one year in IMU In total
our data demonstrate a greater prevalence of IMU placement across the population over time
and an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs8
In addition to examining cumulative days spent in IMU for the full prison population we
also calculated mean lengths of stay (LOS) in IMUs for both the IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg
groups9 Both groups spent substantial amounts of time in IMU settings although as expected
those in IMU-Max had markedly longer stays in IMU than the IMU-AdDSeg group Across the
study period average time in IMU-Max ranged from 7 to 12 months compared to 2 to 4 months
for the IMU-AdDSeg group The mean LOS for IMU-Max fluctuated generally increasing
until 2011 followed by a decline through 2017 to a level just below the mean LOS in 2002
(Figure 1) For the IMU-AdDSeg group mean LOS dropped even more substantially after
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Page 17 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
2011 Changes in average LOS for both groups were a factor in periods of growth in total IMU
populations prior to 2008 as well as in declines of IMU populations after 2011
The Maximum Custody IMU Population Table 3 compares demographic criminal history gang
status and behavioral histories of IMU-Max and general population (GP) prisoners across
snapshots10 showing significant differences between these groups In both populations White
non-Hispanic prisoners represented the largest group However compared to the GP prisoners
of Hispanic ethnicity were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max while White non-
Hispanic prisoners are under-represented (plt001) Black non-Hispanic people were slightly
under-represented among IMU-Max prisoners relative to their presence in the GP These
disparities diverge over time the proportion of Hispanic prisoners in the IMU-Max population
increased by nearly 34 between 2002 and 2017 while the proportions of all other racial and
ethnic groups decreased
[TABLE 3 ABOUT HERE]
IMU-Max prisoners have more serious conviction and in-prison misconduct histories
than GP prisoners Across cohorts nearly three-quarters (73) of IMU-Max prisoners were
convicted of non-sexual violent offenses compared with just 44 of GP prisoners The IMU-
Max group were also first convicted of prison-eligible offenses at a younger age on average
than those in the GP (plt001) Further in-prison misconduct rates were higher and more serious
for the IMU-Max group annual infraction rates for these prisoners were more than double GP
rates and IMU-Max prisoners committed far more violent infractions and staff assaults than
those in GP (plt001)11 Nevertheless serious misconduct appeared to decline substantially
across IMU-Max prisoner snapshots (but not for GP) with average annual infraction rates among
IMU-Max prisoners falling from 83 in 2002 to 49 in 2017 (plt001) average numbers of violent
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Justice Quarterly Page 18 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
infractions decreasing from 4 to 3 (plt05) and average numbers of staff assaults decreasing from
12 to 06 (plt05)
Gang members were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max compared to GP (66
to 22 pooled across all snapshot years) While the prevalence of gang membership grew in
both groups over time patterns of gang affiliation across racial-ethnic sub-categories behaved
differently within the IMU-Max and GP groups Among GP prisoners the proportion of those
affiliated with Hispanic gangs grew by 118 from 2002 to 2017 among IMU-Max prisoners
Hispanic gang membership grew substantially (55) but at a lower rate than in the GP Black
gang membership on the other hand grew by just 7 in the GP but fell by 24 among IMU-
Max prisoners Explaining these patterns is outside the scope of the present analysis but the
scale of divergence in patterns across both racial-ethnic sub-categories of gang affiliates and GP
and IMU-Max populations merits future attention
Discussion
Our findings draw on an especially robust dataset including (1) multiple individual
characteristics like gang status and infraction rates each one of which has constituted the sole
focus of previous analyses (2) snapshot data that covers both the entire prison population and
each individualrsquos entire criminal and incarceration history and (3) a fifteen-year period of
analysis over six snapshot dates a longer time period than in previous studies of solitary
confinement Such a rich dataset makes a succinct analysis of a subset of findings challenging to
present Here we focus on our analytic methods an overview of the characteristics of people in
and out of solitary confinement and overall patterns in solitary confinement use
First we measure the sites subjects and varieties of solitary confinement in terms of the
intersection of location and custody status This operational taxonomy along with the prisoner
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For Peer Review Only
Page 19 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
characteristics associated with solitary confinement placements was achieved by developing an
extensive population analysis script that compiled a correctional dataset tracking events
movements and dispositions into an analytic dataset permitting analysis of patterns of prisoner
behavior and facility placements over time Our multi-generational researcher-practitioner
collaboration with Washington DOC facilitated both obtaining and interpreting this data In turn
we hope our operational taxonomy will facilitate more precise measurements of solitary
confinement use applicable and comparable across the vicissitudes of different correctional
systemsrsquo varied labels for security levels housing locations and solitary confinement practices
(eg Mears et al 2019)
Second we provide an overview and comparison of characteristics of people in solitary
confinement focusing on the specifically targeted IMU-Max group to provide a clear contrast to
general population prisoners Over time the average IMU-Max prisoner was increasingly likely
to be older Hispanic convicted of a violent offense and gang affiliated but decreasingly likely
to have assaulted a staff member Like Pyrooz amp Mitchell (2019) we find gang members over-
represented in solitary confinement relative to their representation in the general prison
population We also find that Hispanic prisoners are increasingly over-represented in solitary
confinement providing evidence of the racially disproportionate impact of solitary confinement
(eg Sakoda amp Simes 2019 Schlanger 2012 Reiter 2012) Our longitudinal analysis shows this
disproportion steadily increasing over time at a faster rate than gang membership in the general
prison system which increased only slightly over our period of analysis As in other studies
finding misconduct associated with solitary confinement placement (eg Labrecque amp Smith
2019) we find that prisoners in solitary confinement have significantly and consistently higher
annual infraction violent infraction and staff assault rates than general population prisoners
15 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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Justice Quarterly Page 20 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
However all three measures of infractions despite remaining fairly stable throughout the
system generally declined in IMU-Max over time
Rendering population patterns visible also renders visible new questions about what
combination of individual behavior patterns and institutional policies produce the changes we
see Have IMU-Max prisoners become less violent and dangerous Have institutional policies
about identifying gang members and behavioral or affiliation criteria for max custody changed
When the UW solitary confinement study was conducted 20 years ago pioneering experiments
in relaxing the stringency of solitary confinement conditions and supporting prisoners in
changing course had begun at Shelton (Rhodes 2004) at that time Washington DOC leaders
justified IMUs as a necessary response to White Supremacist groups and IMU reforms focused
on mitigating organized attacks and challenges to correctional authority by these groups The late
2010s brought another round of reforms attempting to relax the stringent conditions of solitary
confinement this time factional rivalries among gang-affiliated Hispanic prisoners first justified
IMU placements and then became the focus of reform efforts (Warner et al 2014) This
relationship between shifts in prison population demographics behavior patterns and
correctional attention to specific sub-categories of gangs perceived as particularly dangerous
deserves further analysis but identifying the relevant trends as we do here is a first step
Third we see changing patterns in solitary confinement use over time Overall the
prevalence and duration of solitary confinement grew across Washingtonrsquos prison population
between 2002 and 2017 The raw numbers and rates of both Max custody status prisoners and
prisoners in IMU locations more than doubled from 2002 to 2017 And an increasing proportion
of people throughout the system experienced solitary confinement in 2017 more than 1 in 3
prisoners had spent at least a day in solitary compared to 1 in 4 in 2002 This trend echoes and
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 16
For Peer Review Only
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Page 21 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
quantifies Sakoda amp Simesrsquo argument that solitary confinement is a ldquonormal event during
imprisonmentrdquo (2019 2) Although rates of solitary confinement use increased overall average
lengths of stay in solitary confinement (which peaked in 2011 in tandem with the peak years of
solitary confinement use in Washington) decreased By 2017 average lengths of stay on IMU-
Max and IMU-AdDSeg (along with the standard deviations) were the shortest they had been in
the state since 2002 This analysis reveals that Washington DOC had some success in reducing
its use of solitary confinement from peak levels and especially in shortening lengths of stay in
these conditions But what forces facilitated or constrained these reductions
The dramatic shifts we document in both numbers of people in solitary confinement and
durations of stays ndash without any associated dramatic shifts in the usually assumed behavioral
predictors of solitary confinement like overall institutional rates of gang membership or violent
infractions ndash suggest the influence of other institutional factors (cf Lynch 2020) While
additional analysis is needed we can thanks to our iterative conversations with DOC officials
suggest two institutional factors that influenced rates and durations of solitary confinement use
during periods of abrupt change bed capacity increases and local-level rehabilitative
programming changes
First between 2000 and 2008 while DOCrsquos expanding capacity was continually
outpaced by population growth (despite legislative changes intended to reduce imprisonment
WSIPP 2006) IMU capacity in Washington expanded by 520 beds Three years later in 2011
both IMU-Max counts and average LOS peaked Both then decreased in tandem with decreasing
IMU capacity down 212 beds as of 2017 as some units were re-purposed for other special
groups such as parole violators and managed with far less restrictive protocols While the
relationship between capacity IMU counts and length of stay deserves its own focused analysis
17 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 22 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
we have taken the first step by identifying relevant trends These findings suggest that
constraining capacity is likely a key to long-term reductions in solitary confinement along with
reducing lengths of stay and rate of assignments into maximum security settings like IMUs
Second between 2011 and 2014 Washington DOC built upon previous local initiatives
at Clallam Bay and Walla Walla IMUs embarking on an effort to ldquoreinvent what segregation can
berdquo partnering with Vera Institute of Justice eliminating some aversive disciplinary policies
and introducing facility-specific missions and group rehabilitative programming across IMUs
(Neyfakh 2015) Both the temporary drop in IMU-Max populations in 2014 and the more
sustained decreases in average lengths of stay for this population between 2011 and 2017 are tied
to these interventions
The correctional population analysis presented in this study exemplifies an approach to
research and collaboration suited to improving the ability of corrections systems to track changes
in prisoner characteristics lengths of stay and overall rates of placement in various forms of
solitary confinement Rendering such patterns visible strengthens researcher-practitioner
collaboration revealing in Washingtonrsquos case what is working ie sustained reductions in
lengths of solitary confinement stays and what is not working ie less sustained reductions in
rates of solitary confinement use By displaying institutional patterns our collaborative research
findings also suggest avenues of analysis to improve outcomes for prisoners and in prison
settings
MAIN TEXT WORD COUNT 6082
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 18
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 23 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
References
Allen DG Lovell DG amp Rhodes LA Correctional mental health a research agenda In JJ
Fitzpatrick PA White eds Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Research Digest New York
Springer pp 180-184
Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
Yale Law School (ASCA-Liman) (2015) Time-In-Cell The ASCA-Liman 2014 National
Survey of Administrative Segregation in Prison (Aug) Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca-
liman_administrativesegregationreportpdf
__ (2018) Reforming restrictive housing The 2018 ASCA-Liman nationwide survey of time-in-
cell Report issued by the Association of State Correctional Administrators (ASCA) amp the
Liman Center for Public Interest Law at Yale Law School Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca_liman_2018_restrictiv
e_housing_released_oct_2018pdf
Beck A J (2015) Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 201112 Washington DC
Bureau of Justice Statistics Government Printing Office Retrieved from
httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112pdf
Berger D (2014) Captive Nation Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina Press
Bloom J and WE Martin (2013) Black Against Empire The History and Politics of the Black
Panther Party Berkeley University of California Press
Briggs CS JL Sundt and TC Castellano (2003) ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security
prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 1341-1376
19 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 24 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Cochran JC E L Toman D P Mears amp W D Bales (2018) Solitary Confinement as
Punishment Examining In-Prison Sanctioning Disparities Justice Quarterly 35(3) 381-411
Cohen Fred 2008 Penal isolation beyond the seriously mentally ill Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 1017-1047
Foucault M (1977) Discipline and Punish The Birth of the Prison New York Pantheon Books
Haney Craig ldquoThe Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement A Systematic Critiquerdquo
Crime and Justice 47 no 1 (2018) pp 365-416
Haney C amp Lynch M 1997 Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of
supermax and solitary confinement NYU Review of Law amp Social Change 23 477ndash570
Hoffman E amp McCoy J 2018 Concrete Mama Prison Profiles from Walla Walla Seattle WA
University of Washington Press
Kaeble D Cowhig M (2018) Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121
US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018
Kurki L amp N Morris (2001) The Purposes Practices and Problems of Supermax Prisons Crime
and Justice 28 358-424
Labrecque R M amp Smith P (2019) Assessing the impact of time spent in restrictive housing
confinement on subsequent measures of institutional adjustment among men in prison Criminal
Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1445-1455
Liebling A (1999) ldquoDoing Research in Prison Breaking the Silencerdquo Theoretical Criminology
Vol 3147ndash73
Logan MW B Dulisse S Peterson MA Morgan TM Olma P Pareacute (2017) Correctional
shorthands Focal concerns and the decision to administer solitary confinement Journal of
Criminal Justice 52 90-100
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 20
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For Peer Review Only
Page 25 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Lucas J W amp Jones M A (2019) An analysis of the deterrent effects of disciplinary segregation
on institutional rule violation rates Criminal Justice Policy Review 30(5) 765-787
Lovell DG 2008 Patterns of disturbance in a supermax population Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 985-1004
Lovell DG (2014) Isolation Vignettes Practical applications of strict scrutiny The Correctional
Law Reporter 26(1) 3
Lovell DG Cloyes KC Allen DG amp Rhodes LA 2000 Who lives in super-maximum
custody A Washington State study Federal Probation 64(2) 33-38
Lovell DG C Johnson KC Cain 2007 Recidivism of Supermax Prisoners in Washington
State Crime and Delinquency 53(4) 633-56
Lynch M (2019) Focally Concerned About Focal Concerns A Conceptual and Methodological
Critique of Sentencing Disparities Research Justice Quarterly 36(7) 1148-1175
Mears D P Hughes V Pesta G B Bales W D Brown J M Cochran J C amp Wooldredge
J (2019) The new solitary confinement A conceptual framework for guiding and assessing
research and policy on ldquoRestrictive housingrdquo Criminal Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1427-
1444
Mears DP amp WD Bales (2009) Supermax Incarceration and Recidivism Criminology 47(4)
1131-66
National Institute of Justice (NIJ) (2016) Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and
Future Directions Washington DC National Institute of Justice
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nij250315pdf
21 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 26 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Neyfakh L 2015 What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate 432015
httpsslatecomnews-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-
surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml
OrsquoKeefe Maureen L Kelli J Klebe Alysha Stucker Kristin Sturm amp William Leggett (2011) One
Year Longitudinal Study of the Psychological Effects of Administrative Segregation Document
No 232973 Washington DC National Criminal Justice Research Service National Institute
of Justice wwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants 232973pdf
Petersilia J (1991) Policy Relevance and the Future of Criminology Criminology 29(1) 1-15
__ (2009) When Prisoners Come Home Parole and Prisoner Re-entry New York Oxford
University Press
Pyrooz D C amp M M Mitchell (2019) The Use of Restrictive Housing on Gang and Non- Gang
Affiliated Inmates in US Prisons Findings from a National Survey of Correctional Agencies
Justice Quarterly 37(4) 590-615
Pyrooz DC RM Labrecque JJ Tostlebe amp B Useem (2020) Views on COVID-19 from Inside
Prison Perspectives of High-security Prisoners Justice Evaluation Journal doi
1010802475197920201777578
Reiter K (2012) Parole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007
Punishment amp Society 14(5) 530-63
__ (2016) 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven
Yale University Press)
__ (2018) ldquoAfter Solitary Confinementrdquo Studies in Law Politics and Society Vol 77 1-29
Reiter K J Ventura D Lovell D Augustine M Barragan T Blair K Chesnut P Dashtgard
G Gonzalez N Pifer J Strong (2020) ldquoPsychological Distress in Solitary Confinement
Symptoms Severity and Prevalence United States 2017-18rdquo American Journal of Public
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 22
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 27 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Health Vol 110 S52-S56
Rhodes LA (2004) Total Confinement Madness and Reason in Maximum Security Berkeley
CA University of California Press
Riveland C (1999) Supermax prisons Overview and general considerations Washington DC
National Institute of Corrections httpstaticnicicgovLibrary014937pdf
Rubin A T amp Reiter K (2018) Continuity in the Face of Penal Innovation Revisiting the
History of American Solitary Confinement Law amp Social Inquiry Vol 434 1604-1632
Sakoda RT amp Simes JT (2019) Solitary Confinement and the US Prison Boom Criminal
Justice Policy Review doi 1011770887403419895315
Schlanger M (2012) Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial
disparities Michigan Journal of Race amp Law 18 241
Smith Peter S 2006 The Effects of Solitary Confinement on Prison Inmates A Brief History and
Review of the Literature In Michael Tonry (ed) Crime and Justice 34 441-528
State of Washington SHB1765 1993
Tasca Melinda amp J Turanovic (2018) Examining Race and Gender Disparities in Restrictive
Housing Placements National Institute of Justice WEB Du Bois Program of Research on
Race and Crime Project SummaryDoc No 252062
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants252062pdf
Toch Hans (1977) Living in Prison The Ecology of Survival New York Free Press
Toch H amp Adams K w Grant D (1989) Coping Maladaptation in prisons Washington DC
Transaction Publishers revised as Acting Out American Psychological Association 2002
23 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 28 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Warner B D Pacholke amp C Kujath (2014) Operation Place Safety First Year in Review
(Washington State Department of Corrections)
httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
WSIPP (Washington State Institute for Public Policy) (2006) Evidence-Based Public Policy
Options to Reduce Future Prison Construction Criminal Justice Costs and Crime Rates
httpswwwwsippwagovReportFile952Wsipp_Evidence-Based-Public-Policy-Options-to-
Reduce-Future-Prison-Construction-Criminal-Justice-Costs-and-Crime-Rates_Full-
Reportpdf
Acknowledgements The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Eldon Vail Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Formerly of the University of Washington Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor and L Clark Johnson provided critical advice at early stages of data compilation At the University of California Irvine Keely Blissmer helped to compile the literature review Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Pasha Dashtgard Gabriela Gonzalez and Justin Strong all participated in data collection and analysis at various stages of this project Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
Funding Details This work was supported by the Langeloth Foundation and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
Disclosure Statement None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
1 In a timely example of how relevant the analysis in the instant study is DOC research staff recently noted that they ldquohad some concernsrdquo with these numbers as originally reported and have revised them upwards re-calculating that in 2015 34 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo according to the ASCA-Liman Definition and in 2017 41 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo by this definition E-mail communication with DOC Department of Research dated Sept 25 and Sept 28 2020 on file with authors The ASCA-Liman report defines ldquorestrictive housingrdquo as ldquoseparating prisoners from the general population and holding them in cells for an average of 22 or more hours per day for 15 continuous days or morerdquo 2 Intra-facility housing changes and periods spent in recently decommissioned internal solitary confinement units are better captured in our related intensive field study dataset of 106 solitary confinement prisoners (Reiter et al 2020) 3 General crime types were derived from DOC codes in the administrative data Violent non-sex offenses include murder manslaughter robbery and assault sex offenses include rape sexual assault child molestation and failure to register as a sex offender property crimes include arson burglary theft forgery trafficking and possession of
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 24
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For Peer Review Only
Page 29 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
stolen property drug crimes include manufacturing delivering or possession with intent to distribute and possession of a controlled substance 4 To avoid confusion we follow DOCs terminology with the term Hispanic which DOC codes separately from race as lsquoHispanic Originrsquo (YN) but we apply these data to define mutually exclusive categories ldquoWhite non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as White and who is not classified as Hispanic Origin ldquoBlack non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as Black and not identified as Hispanic ldquoHispanicrdquo includes any individual whose ethnicity is listed as Hispanic or Latino regardless of any other racial identification ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as AsianPacific Islander Native AmericanAmerican Indian Other Unknown and whose ethnicity is not Hispanic 5 Rates of gang affiliation by racialethnic group were generated by dividing the total number of members in each racialethnic group identified as an STG member by the total number of prisoners of each racialethnic group Table 1 displays the STG membership by racialethnic affiliation of STGs grouped from detailed STG data provided by DOC STGs identified as ldquoWhiterdquo affiliated included Biker Skinhead White Supremacist and Security Threat Concern ldquoBlackrdquo affiliated included Black Gangster Disciples Blood Crip and Vice Lord ldquoHispanicrdquo affiliated included Nortentildeo Surentildeo Paisas La Fuma Cuban and Hispanic-Other ldquoOtherrdquo affiliated included Asian and Other 6 Our original analysis identified an even larger proportion of prisoners in this ldquoOther-Maxrdquo group our practitioner collaborators thought more than 10 was an unlikely proportion of prisoners to be assigned max custody status but still awaiting placement in an IMU or similar facility and encouraged us to evaluate whether some of those ldquoOther-Maxrdquo prisoners were housed out-of-state Indeed when we examined individual cases in the original movement files we found this was true leading us to better specify and exclude those prisoners in our sample of any custody status who were housed out of state 7 Here the 45-day cut point reflects institutionally-mandated administrative hearings required to extend or release an individual from administrative segregation Likewise for those classified as Max (re-)classification reviews only happen every 6-12 months as reflected in the overall longer mean lengths of stay for IMU-Max as opposed to IMU-AdDSeg groups Both represent examples of policies driving patterns in lengths of stay 8 This analysis uses the person (in custody as of the snapshot date) as the unit of analysis Even if a single person has multiple stays in an IMU during the current admission up to the snapshot date they would be counted only once as ldquohaving spent at least one day in an IMUrdquo We further examined the average percentage of days spent in an IMU out of the total number of days in prison up to the snapshot date for each cohort finding an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs across the cohorts While not presented here in detail this finding reinforces the trends in the cumulative time spent in IMU and average LOS analyses 9 Unlike the cumulative days in IMU calculations the average length of stay by classification and confinement levels presented here do not cumulate days in IMU facilities Here each placement in a distinct IMU facility is analyzed as a separate placement term Thus if one prisoner is placed in IMU facility A and subsequently moved to IMU facility B the length of stay in each placement will be counted separately (To the extent individuals have consecutive stays across multiple IMUs then these numbers might undercount average lengths of total stay) Length of stay is calculated from admission date in the current incarceration up until the snapshot date 10 The general population (GP) excludes prisoners housed in IMUs prisoners with a max custody classification held in other locations (ie those in SOU ITP or ldquoOther Locationsrdquo) prisoners held out of state and prisoners whose locations or custody statuses were unknown 11 Violent infractions include seven infraction types aggravated assault on another offender fighting possession of a weapon aggravated assault on a staff member sexual assault of a staff member assault on another offender sexual assault of another offender and assault on a staff member
25 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE
See next page
91
ID
ID
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
PLOS ONE
OPEN ACCESS
Citation Strong JD Reiter K Gonzalez G Tublitz R Augustine D Barragan M et al (2020) The body in isolation The physical health impacts of incarceration in solitary confinement PLoS ONE 15 (10) e0238510 httpsdoiorg101371journal pone0238510
Editor Andrea Knittel University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill UNITED STATES
Received February 19 2020
Accepted August 18 2020
Published October 9 2020
Peer Review History PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process therefore we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final published articles The editorial history of this article is available here httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510
Copyright copy 2020 Strong et al This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original author and source are credited
Data Availability Statement Data cannot be shared publicly because the administrative data we analyze in this paper is drawn from a confidential data file shared with the research team for the
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The body in isolation The physical health
impacts of incarceration in solitary
confinement
Justin D Strong 1 Keramet Reiter1 Gabriela Gonzalez1Dagger Rebecca Tublitz1Dagger
Dallas Augustine1Dagger Melissa Barragan1Dagger Kelsie Chesnut 1Dagger Pasha Dashtgard2Dagger
Natalie Pifer3Dagger Thomas R Blair4Dagger
1 Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Irvine California United
States of America 2 Department of Psychological Sciences University of California Irvine Irvine California
United States of America 3 Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice The University of Rhode Island
Kingston Rhode Island United States of America 4 Department of Psychiatry Southern California
Permanente Medical Group Downey Los Angeles California United States of America
These authors contributed equally to this work
Dagger These authors also contributed equally to this work GG and RT are joint assistant authors on this work
jdstronguciedu
Abstract
We examine how solitary confinement correlates with self-reported adverse physical health
outcomes and how such outcomes extend the understanding of the health disparities associ-
ated with incarceration Using a mixed methods approach we find that solitary confinement is
associated not just with mental but also with physical health problems Given the dispropor-
tionate use of solitary among incarcerated people of color these symptoms are most likely to
affect those populations Drawing from a random sample of prisoners (n = 106) in long-term
solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections in 2017 we con-
ducted semi-structured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assess-
ments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for these subjects We also
conducted a paper survey of the entire long-term solitary confinement population (n = 225
respondents) and analyzed administrative data for the entire population of prisoners in the
state in 2017 (n = 17943) Results reflect qualitative content and descriptive statistical analy-
sis BPRS scores reflect clinically significant somatic concerns in 15 of sample Objective
specification of medical conditions is generally elusive but that itself is a highly informative
finding Using subjective reports we specify and analyze a range of physical symptoms expe-
rienced in solitary confinement (1) skin irritations and weight fluctuation associated with the
restrictive conditions of solitary confinement (2) un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
associated with the restrictive policies of solitary confinement (3) musculoskeletal pain exac-
erbated by both restrictive conditions and policies Administrative data analyses reveal dispro-
portionate rates of racialethnic minorities in solitary confinement This analysis raises the
stakes for future studies to evaluate comparative prevalence of objective medical diagnoses
and potential causal mechanisms for the physical symptoms specified here and for under-
standing differential use of solitary confinement and its medically harmful sequelae
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 1 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
limited purpose of evaluating patterns of solitary confinement use in the Washington department of corrections If any researchers wish to obtain a similar data file from the Washington department of corrections the authors of this paper would be happy to consult with those researchers about the request and the process for obtaining the data In theory the administrative data file used in this study could be accessed again by future researchers Researchers would need to contact the Washington department of corrections Here is the process and relevant contacts httpswww DocWaGovinformationdataresearch Htmrequests We confirm the authors have no special access privileges others would not have to the data underlying our study beyond patient negotiations with the Washington department of corrections about exactly what data would be shared for what purposes
Funding KR received a Langeloth Grant from the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation https wwwlangelothorg The funders had no role in study design data collection and analysis decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist
Introduction
The health implications of solitary confinement have received increasing attention in recent
years [1 2] Although both the conditions and terms defining solitary confinement are con-
tested the practice generally involves being locked in a cell alone for 22 or more hours per
day with extremely limited access to human contact and communication [3 4] Until recently
however research on the health consequences of solitary confinement has focused almost
entirely on the negative impacts on mental health [4ndash8] While initial studies focused on the
effects of sensory deprivation [9ndash11] recent work has examined the impacts of social depriva-
tions [12 13] Such studies have found that placement in solitary confinement has been associ-
ated with symptoms of increased psychological distress such as anxiety depression paranoia
and aggression [14ndash16] A 2018 study for instance found that prisoners who had spent time
in solitary confinement were three times as likely to exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) than those who had not [17] Some researchers however have argued that
the psychological harms of solitary confinement are limited or unverified [18 19] The analy-
ses on which such opinions rely have in turn been criticized for neglecting existing literature
and for other serious methodological concerns including an inability to isolate exposure to
solitary confinement lack of specificity about variability and comparability in actual condi-
tions of confinement and the inapplicability of psychological assessment scales in the prison
context [1 20]
In a study examining the lived experiences of solitary confinement in Washington state we
too focused on documenting the mental health impacts of the practice through qualitative
interviews with a random sample of 106 prisoners in long-term solitary confinement applica-
tion of a Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment at two points in time with those pris-
oners review of medical health records and analysis of administrative data To our surprise
however we found that after anxiety and depression the third most common significant
health symptoms experienced by our subjects were ldquosomatic concernsrdquo defined by the BPRS
as ldquoconcerns over present bodily healthrdquo [21] This observation led us to examine our data sys-
tematically for evidence of the impacts of solitary confinement on physical health and to con-
sider the implications of such impacts for understanding the health disparities enacted by
solitary confinement and by incarceration more broadly
Existing research on the physical health impacts of incarceration demonstrates the need for
further study of both the medical effects of isolation and its racially disparate impacts espe-
cially considering that there are roughly 80000 people in isolation units nationwide and this
population includes a disproportionate number of racial minorities relative to the overall
prison population [22] Outside of prison health disparities by race and ethnicity are well
attested by existing epidemiologic research [23] Notably Black and other racialethnic minor-
ities consistently show lower life expectancies and worse mental health outcomes than whites
[24ndash27] Health disparities persist and are magnified among the incarcerated population
where people of color are disproportionately represented [28ndash30] In particular people in
prison are at higher risk than the general population for substance use disorders psychiatric
disorders victimization and chronic infectious diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C [31ndash34]
Incarceration has also been shown to exacerbate chronic illnesses such as obesity [35] hyper-
tension and asthma [36 37 29] and formerly incarcerated people experience disparately
adverse health outcomes more generally [38] The interaction between the disparate impacts
of race and incarceration on health mean that mass incarceration itself has been identified as a
social determinant of health for Black men in the United States [39 40]
Solitary confinement amplifies the disproportionately adverse effects of mass incarceration
on people of color Depending on the composition of the prison system Blacks andor Latinos
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 2 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
are often over-represented in solitary confinement relative to their (over)representation in the
general prison population [40ndash44] Any concentrated health disadvantages affecting people in
prison and especially people of color is potentially even more concentrated among those liv-
ing in solitary confinement Moreover existing evidence suggests that conditions of solitary
confinement exacerbate health problems and pose a significant public health risk [45 42]
Studies reporting the physical health impacts of solitary confinement have tended to focus
on issues like self-harm and suicide [46 47 8] One recent study has examined the cardiovas-
cular health burdens of solitary confinement [45] A growing body of neuroscience literature
has examined the effects of solitary confinement on the brains of lab animals documenting
that lab animals in isolated environments have ldquoa decrease in the anatomical complexity of the
brainrdquo compared to those in more enriched environments [48 49] (p70) One recent study
found similar effects in Antarctic expeditioners a shrinking hippocampus hypothesized to be
a result of the isolated and monotonous environment [50] Such neuroscience research has
been used in litigation to argue that there is likely a similar effect on humans imprisoned in
solitary confinement [51 48 49] The associations between solitary confinement self-harm
and lab animalsrsquo brain structure suggest comorbidity between mental health and physical
injury in solitary confinement [1 48]
The physical effects of solitary confinement manifest well beyond release from isolation
and from incarceration overall One recent study has examined post-release mortality (from
all causes including suicide murder and drug overdose) associated with previous time in soli-
tary confinement people who had spent time in solitary confinement in North Carolina
between 2000 and 2015 were 24 more likely to die in their first year after release than former
prisoners who had not spent time in solitary confinement [52] Similarly a 2020 study found
that Danish people who had spent time in solitary confinement had higher mortality within
five years of being released from prison compared to those who never spent time in solitary
confinement [53] This mortality risk associated with solitary confinement exceeds the already
high mortality risk associated with incarceration and release from prison [52ndash54]
In sum while many studies have examined the relationship between incarceration and
health and some studies have examined the relationship between solitary confinement and
mental health the existing literature lacks analysis of disparate physical health outcomes across
levels and severity of confinement [2] especially within isolation and for incarcerated people
of color To our knowledge this article is the first of its kind to consider associations between
solitary confinement and a range of physical health problems and to incorporate explicit con-
sideration of racial health disparities
Methods and materials
To explore the physical health problems experienced in isolation we draw upon a research
study of people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of
Corrections (WADOC) The study consists of four dimensions of participant data 1 surveys
of prisoners in solitary confinement 2 in-depth interviews with a random sample of prisoners
in solitary confinement 3 reviews of the medical (covering mental and physical health) files
as well as the disciplinary records for this subset of prisoners and 4 administrative data for
the entire 2017 prison population provided by the WADOC Data was collected in 2017 and
2018
Setting
WADOC is a mid-sized state prison system with the 12th lowest rate of incarceration of the 50
United States [20] The state and its prison system have a reputation for being progressive
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 3 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
including engaging in reforms to minimize the use of solitary confinement statewide and for
inviting independent academic researchers to evaluate conditions and programs [20 55ndash57]
Five of the statersquos 12 prison facilities have an Intensive Management Unit (IMU) an all-male
unit or building housing people in solitary confinement (with highly restricted access to com-
missary phones radios televisions visitors and roughly 10 hours per week out-of-cell) for
durations ranging from months to years Our study focused on people within the IMUs on
ldquomaximum custody statusrdquo the highest security level assigned to state prisoners housed in the
IMU for an indeterminate period usually following one or more rule violations with return to
the general prison population contingent on meeting specific benchmarks
Participant sampling
First paper surveys were distributed in-person (and collected on the same day) to all 363 peo-
ple on maximum custody status in the five state IMUs in the spring of 2017 Next during the
summer of 2017 roughly one-third (29) of all 363 people on maximum custody status in
IMUs were interviewed selected from randomly ordered lists of the population of each IMU
One year later (2018) all participants from our initial random sample who were still incarcer-
ated one year later including those no longer housed in the IMU were re-interviewed We
also reviewed paper medical and disciplinary files for each consenting year-one interview par-
ticipant Interviews file reviews and observations were conducted over two separate three-
week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team members
Finally we received administrative data on all people within the state prison system as of July
1 2017
Research team training
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and develop the interview instru-
ment Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol for
administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment train-
ing sessions with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Venturamdashin year one and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Dr Ventura conducted an interra-
ter reliability analysis confirming trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or
greater for the BPRS This extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members (9
women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral students (9) with
expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement settings identified
and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being studied and mini-
mized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application of questions
and assessments Eight of the authors on this paper participated in interviews two participated
only in data analysis
Interviews
On site in the Washington State IMUs after the random sample was drawn and willing partici-
pants identified prison staff escorted participants one at a time to a confidential area (moni-
tored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff) Prior to conducting interviews interviewers
informed participants that participation was voluntary and would not involve incentives
administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all informa-
tion shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent security-
related threatrdquo (In the highly restrictive setting of the IMU any incentive beyond providing
human contact and an attentive listener would both run the risk of being an undue influence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 4 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
coercing participation and be administratively prohibited) Participants provided oral consent
to participate in the interview Immediately following interviews interviewers asked partici-
pants whether they consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to partici-
pating in one-year follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all
but two (n = 104) consented in writing to medical file reviews Following interviews interview-
ers reviewed consenting participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of diagnoses prescrip-
tions and substance abuse status WADOC additionally provided electronic administrative
health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as comparable popula-
tion-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
All identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings tran-
scripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible
only through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in
data cleaning and linking The University of California Irvine Office of Research Institutional
Review Board approved this study (HS 2016ndash2816) and the WADOC Research Department
reviewed this approval
Data collection instruments
The initial paper survey of people confined in the WADOC IMU consisted of 36 numbered
questions (each containing a combination of yesno ordinal bubble options and short answer
sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to explain or elaborate on their answers)
about experiences in IMUs conditions of confinement health and well-being and demo-
graphic background drawing from existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [58ndash
62] Survey in S1 Text In all there were 89 substantive items on the survey (excluding demo-
graphic questions) coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU) ordinal (eg
daily weekly monthly describing frequency of interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) vari-
ables In this paper we report on the results of a sub-set of five quantitatively coded items relat-
ing to health from this larger survey This survey functioned as a pilot instrument for the in-
person interviews allowing us to ensure questions were clear and relevant yielding responses
comparable across subjects and institutional contexts and providing our interviewers with a
baseline description of participantsrsquo experiences prior to conducting qualitative interviews
The qualitative interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured questions
(each containing a combination of yesno questions and probing open-ended follow-up ques-
tions) seeking elaboration on responses from the survey questions and also drawing from
existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [60ndash63] including conditions of daily life
(prior to and during isolation) perceived state of physical and mental health access to medical
treatment and experiences with required programming in the IMU among other topics
Interview instrument in S2 Text We first used the instrument at the smallest IMU in Wash-
ington interviewing 15 prisoners and we then revised both the wording and ordering of ques-
tions for maximum clarity and engagement in the remaining 91 interviews we conducted
across the four other IMUs in the state In total 40 of the substantive items on the interview
instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 18 embedded questions designed to
establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg
How much does it cost to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have you noticed any
changes in your health since you have been in this IMU) variables Such questions always
included open-ended follow-up questions (eg Can you describe those changes) Transcribed
responses to those open-ended follow-up questions which related in any way to physical
health constitute the central source of data analyzed in this paper
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 5 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Interviews ranged in length from 45 minutes to three hours Follow-up interviews lasted
between 45 minutes and two hours The condensed year-two instrument contained approxi-
mately 70 questions largely replicating the year-one questions but excluding the background
demographic questions and questions about experiences over time in prison and adjusting
some questions to address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status
As part of both initial and follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psy-
chological assessment both during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following
(for the 10 observational items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech)
the interviews For self-report questions (14 items) embedded in the interview guide inter-
viewers asked about the presence of symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard [20]
Interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier audio recorded (with permis-
sion) professionally transcribed in Microsoft Word translated (in one case from Spanish into
English) by research team members systematically stripped of identifying information and
then systematically checked against the original audio by the original interviewer(s) Interviews
were linked by random identifier to BPRS score sheets (which were scanned and entered into
Microsoft Excel for descriptive statistical analysis) scanned medical file review notes and
WADOC administrative data
Data analysis amp reporting
BPRS and other administrative data were imported into Statistical Package for Social Science
(SPSS) (IBM Armonk NY) and Stata (StataCorp LLC College Station TX) to generate
descriptive statistics including the comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS
items and factors relating to physical health and demographics of the sample interview popula-
tion as compared to the IMU population the overall state prison population and the overall
population of the state itself Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos test were performed to evaluate
the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing location time and raceethnicity chi
square tests of homogeneity were performed to compare racialethnic distributions in the
IMU population the general prison population and the Washington state population The
demographic data utilizes a confidential data file from the WADOC
Transcribed interviews were analyzed using Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software Develop-
ment GmbH Berlin Germany) Six team members who had also conducted interviews
engaged in an iterative and recursive coding process Consistent with the tenets of constructivist
grounded theory coders inductively explored how participants make meaning of their experi-
ences (here their time in solitary confinement) [63 64] This process included initial line-by-
line open-coding of a subset of transcripts which generated a list of 214 codes grouped into 11
major categories (eg Health) with sub-themes (eg physical health) [63] Some of these initial
codes and categories corresponded with specific questions on our interview instrument (most
relevant for the instant analysis question 29 concerned medical ldquokitesrdquo and questions 30 31
and 38 concerned physical health and somatic concerns) However open-ended questions also
yielded responses related to these topics and were so coded Given the constraints of the prison
setting (in-person contact is expensive and time-consuming mail contact is not confidential
because of prison censoring policies) participants have not provided systematic feedback on
their transcripts or our findings However the year-two interviews did give research team mem-
bers an opportunity to discuss year-one themes with participants
All quotations presented in this paper were initially identified in the first phase of our cod-
ing process by one of three (out of our initial 214) codes ldquosomatic concernsrdquo ldquophysical healthrdquo
or ldquokitesrdquo (the standard slang term for a paper form handed to a correctional officer to request
medical attention) Two coders then used intermediate focused coding techniques to
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 6 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
re-code these 319 quotes exploring the relationship between solitary confinement condi-
tions and policies and physical health problems ldquotransform[ing] basic data into more abstract
concepts and allowing the theory to emerge from the datardquo [64 p 5]
Notes from reviewing participantsrsquo paper medical files corroborate details from the qualita-
tive analysis that systematically anchors this data Each participant has been assigned a pseudo-
nym and because we are also exploring the racially disparate impact of the health problems we
identify we specify each quoted participantrsquos self-identified race or ethnicity We linked quota-
tions to specific racialethnic identities only after quotations were selected for inclusion in this
manuscript as representative of the themes we identified in coding
Results
In total 225 prisoners in IMU (62) responded to our in-person survey The refusal rate of
initial interviews was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of prison-
ers [15 58 59 65] The drop-out rate of our sample for the one-year follow-up interviews was
comparable to other studies at 25 there were 4 refusals 21 institutional out-of-state and
parole transfers precluding follow-up and one death [58ndash61] Our random sample of 106 (all-
male) IMU prisoners reflects a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU mean of 5
prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Among our participants 42 were white 12
were African American 23 were Latino 23 were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differ-
ences between our participants and all people held in IMU at the time of our sample People in
the general prison population at the time of our sample are notably different as they are older
less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang-affili-
ated and less likely to be Latino than those held in IMU [20] (We discuss racial differences
across these populations further in the final results sub-section)
Prevalence of somatic concerns
As an initial basis for describing physical symptoms experienced in solitary confinement we
present a quantitative analysis of the prevalence of somatic concerns in our random sample of
106 people held in IMU and the variability of these concerns across time and housing location
In 2017 15 of participants reported having clinically significant (formally defined as a sever-
ity of 4 or higher out of a possible 7) somatic concerns (formally defined as ldquoconcern over pres-
ent bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment [21] In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80
respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 reported clinically signifi-
cant ratings of somatic concern
While ratings of clinically significant somatic concern mostly varied within participants
over time our analysis indicated some persistence of somatic issues across the two assessment
periods Of those who reported clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were
re-interviewed in 2018 (12 respondents 4 were unavailable for re-interview) 25 (3 respon-
dents) indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic issues in 2018 An exact McNe-
marrsquos test revealed no statistically significant relationship between the proportion of
respondents reporting clinically significant somatic concerns in 2017 and 2018 (p = 0 0) In the initial 2017 assessment all study subjects were housed in IMU At the time of re-
interview in 2018 52 respondents had moved into the general prison population while 28
remained in IMU Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 (6 of 28) reported clinically sig-
nificant somatic concerns compared to just 8 of those housed in the general prison popula-
tion (4 of 52) While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
concern in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 confidence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 7 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test) No significant differences were observed in the distribution
of clinically significant somatic concern ratings across racial and ethnic groups
Complementing the BPRS assessment data from the random sample of 106 individuals in
IMU custody survey data collected from the full IMU population in 2017 further indicated the
prevalence of somatic concerns among this population Of the 225 survey respondents 63
expressed health concerns 48 were taking medication 17 had arthritis and 8 had experi-
enced a fall in solitary confinement Importantly for the analysis of emerging symptoms in par-
ticular 82 replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo
while in the IMU These survey results like the BPRS somatic concern results benefit from tri-
angulation with our qualitative data
Specifying physical symptoms
We identify three categories of physical symptoms people experience in solitary confinement
each associated with different aspects of IMU housing symptoms associated with deprivation
conditions symptoms associated with deprivation policies limiting access to healthcare and
chronic musculoskeletal pain exacerbated by the intersection of deprivation conditions and
deprivation policies In each category we analyze how the institution of solitary confinement
shapes both physical health outcomes and perceptions of health for people housed in solitary
confinement revealing both the mechanisms of physical health deterioration and the accentu-
ated comorbidity of physical and mental health in solitary confinement
Deprivation conditions Our participants described a range of physical ailments directly
connected to the conditions of their confinement especially the various deprivations of movement
provisions (from food to toiletries) and human contact inherent in the institutional restrictions
defining solitary confinement Skin irritations and weight fluctuations were the most common of
these participants experienced both as co-morbid with anxiety and other health issues
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They
understood these conditions as being directly associated the poor air and water quality irritat-
ing hygiene products and lack of sun exposure inherent to their conditions of solitary confine-
ment People in the IMU (unlike those in the general prison population) usually cannot
purchase or trade for alternative higher-quality hygiene products their cells have limited nat-
ural light (at best a window far above eye-level at worst no window) and even the exercise
areas frequently have limited natural light Indeed research has documented how isolation can
cause vitamin D deficiency due to lack of natural light exposure [66]
As Joseph (white) explained an ostensibly trivial physical problem like dandruff can
inspire a sense of helplessness in the IMU
Well I try not to [think about] what happens to my body Because yoursquore going to obsess
on it probably Minor things become huge when yoursquore in segregation and so something
that youndashyou as being free in society can alleviate by going to you know to [the store] or
whatever and just get a dandruff shampoo You canrsquot do that here And kiting medical and
telling them ldquoHey I have a severe problem with dermatitis and my headrsquos itching and Irsquove
got bleeding scabs on my headrdquo or whatever the case may be therersquos nothing that we can
do here Yoursquore SOL [shit out of luck]
Josephrsquos inability to treat his skin irritations himself led to both helplessness and obsessive-
ness further exacerbating the discomfort and potential health consequences of the issue This
case illustrates how a free personrsquos flaky skin or minor embarrassment becomes a potentially
severe medical problem in solitary confinement entailing bleeding scabs on the scalp
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 8 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Participants frequently experienced fluctuations in body weight and as with skin irritations
connected these symptoms to conditions inherent to solitary confinement What started as
simple observations about diet exercise and appearance often turned into analyses of the
impact of conditions of confinement on physical as well as mental health Simon (Black) dis-
cussed being ldquoreal worriedrdquo about his weight
The only reason I know theyrsquore not really giving us the calorie needs theyrsquore supposed to
give us is because I feel like Irsquom losing more muscle than I am fat And to lose more muscle
than fat is because yoursquore not getting the nutrients that you need
Not only is weight loss a significant source of anxiety for Simon but he connects the depri-
vations of confinementndashthe lack of nutritious food and sufficient caloriesndashto physical changes
in his body Whether his explanation is correct or simple lack of physical activity is more likely
to explain the changes accurately IMU confinement ostensibly produced the change
Participants also described restricting their own dietary intake beyond the already limited
rations (usually calculated to meet the minimum daily calorie intake standards) for a variety
of reasons from the quality of the food to their emotional state Michael (Latino) described
being suspicious of staff having tampered with his food ldquoI got my breakfast bowl and there
was a tear on the plastic [ ] Sometimes your mind plays tricks on you like theyrsquore trying to
poison you or somethingrdquo While Michael noted that his suspicions were likely just in his
mind Philip (Black) asserted ldquoThey was poisoning my foodndashthey control everything They
can even manipulate the water Irsquom so fucking serious this place is highly technologically
advancedrdquo For those like Michael and Philip psychological states associated with the condi-
tions of confinement (eg suspiciousness paranoia and potentially psychosis) caused them to
restrict their food intake resulting in weight loss Indeed both Michael and Philip had docu-
mented diagnoses of mental illness in their medical files bipolar disorder and undifferentiated
schizophrenia respectively Food restrictions can of course lead to more imminently danger-
ous conditions such as dehydration electrolyte imbalances or renal failurendashnone of which are
likely to be subject to objective evaluation in the IMU as we discuss further in the next sub-
section on the impacts of deprivation policies
Some prisoners made a more direct connection between their mental health their dietary
intake and their physical health For instance Kai (Native American) said
I donrsquot work out because I have a problem breathing This is the first time Irsquove ever done
a program [IMU term] where Irsquove felt like I was breaking Because before Irsquod be working
out Now Irsquom stuck in this Irsquom battling mentally with everything going on Which
affected my body effects my eating sometimes Irsquoll just take the [food] tray but Irsquoll flush the
stuff down the toilet
As Kai suggests in the IMU exercise functions not only as a means to practice physical fit-
ness but also to provide structure for people to manage both their days and the mental strain of
being in isolation When asked a general question like ldquohow are you doing in the IMUrdquo many
participants like Kai referenced whether or not they were engaging in exercise as a way to
gauge how they were faring overall People like Kai shared feelings of lethargy or feeling too
overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day induced by long periods in solitary confine-
ment Their weight fluctuated during these cycles going down with regular and social exercise
routines going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exer-
cise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations high-
light the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 9 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Deprivation policies Our participants described multiple situations in which official
IMU policies and unofficial IMU practices exacerbated their physical ailments especially their
chronic health problems Such policies and practices included the prioritization of security
over care in emergency situations disruptions in care upon transfer into the IMU and over-
whelming administrative hurdles to accessing care in the first place If prisons are largely
unequipped to provide the appropriate care and environment for chronic medical problems
[67 31] our findings reveal both the specific mechanisms by which solitary confinement poli-
cies amplify the usual bureaucratic challenges of accessing healthcare in prison and the kinds
of physical health problems that go unaddressed as a result
First in cases of medical emergencies people housed in the IMU have response buttons in
their cells they can press to alert staff However many of the people we interviewed both
doubted whether staff would respond swiftly enough in an actual emergency and worried
about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response
if medical staff ultimately deemed their problem non-emergent Indeed prisoners perceived
IMU policies as systematically prioritizing incapacitation over medical attention Carl (white)
described an incident where he experienced delayed care and was pepper sprayed after having
suffered from a seizure all because he was unable to comply with orders to stand following the
episode
I had a serious seizure And I was laying on the floor and I had defecated I was laying in a
puddle of puke Well [the guards] had come to the door and I guess they had called med-
ical and they were standing there for 45 minutes yelling ldquoStand up and cuff up so we can
give you medical attentionrdquo They did not pop the door and go in there and give me medical
attention And so unknown to me they popped the cuff port and they sprayed OC [pepper
spray] in there And then they came in They noticed that I was unconscious and finally a
nurse looked at my medical file and shersquos like ldquohersquos epilepticrdquo
In the tense environment of the IMU where staff manage people with histories of violating
prison rules assaulting staff and often serious mental health needs immediate security con-
cerns readily take priority over assessing medical histories and providing healthcare
Second simply being transferred into the IMU often disrupted care in dangerous ways For
instance Julian (Hawaiian) described how when he was transferred into a new solitary con-
finement unit he had to restart the process of seeking treatment for (and even simple acknowl-
edgement of) recurring kidney stones Whereas he had fought and been able to receive x-rays
and medication to help manage his kidney pain at his prior institution he now found this fight
to be futile at his new facility ldquoTheyrsquore just going to take me out of room take me over there to
medical and theyrsquore going to be like oh herersquos the hot water or hot bag or whateverrdquo And
Tony (Native Americanwhite) described a battery of physical and mental health issuesndashan
enlarged prostate a painful cyst that needed to be surgically removed varicose veins ldquochronic
suicidal thoughtsrdquo anxiety and depressionndashall requiring medications which he had difficulty
maintaining access to in the IMU For instance he described how both his Amitriptyline
which partly treated his periodic limb movement sleep disorder and his seizure medication
Dilantin were both discontinued in the IMU resulting in serious injuries to his foot and head
Third a number of bureaucratic hurdles and barriers discouraged people in the IMU from
attempting to access healthcare at all even in potentially life-threatening situations In order to
see a medical professional people isolated in the IMU must fill out a paper request (a ldquokiterdquo)
and hand it to a correctional officer passing by or report a concern to a nurse who makes
daily rounds passing by each cell in the IMU The medical response happens either ldquocellfrontrdquo
with the person talking to the medical professional through his cell door in earshot of others
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 10 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
held in solitary confinement or ldquoby escortrdquo with the person in handcuffs and leg-cuffs if not
also belly chains and a hood usually accompanied by at least two to four correctional officers
to a medical treatment area Vitamins and over-the-counter medications like Tylenol or as-
needed medications like asthma inhalers are kept outside of the cell and available only at spec-
ified times or again by paper kite request Throughout WADOC people must pay $4 for
non-emergency medical care (unless they are indigent in which case WADOC provides care
without a co-pay) but people held in the IMU have more restrictive caps on their overall
spending for any needs including healthcare food and toiletries proportionally raising the
relative cost of seeking care for non-emergency symptoms
These policies in combination with negative perceptions about the quality of care available
to them dissuaded participants from seeking medical services Deon (Black) described new
and unfamiliar ldquobreathing problemsrdquo and rising ldquoblood pressurerdquo in IMU but felt that seeking
medical attention would be useless
Itrsquos pointless for me to knock on the window and ask the nurse ldquoHey nurse do thisrdquo
Because every time I knock on the windowndashit is pointless because the only thing the DOC
wants is money It is money I think people in the cell should be important And itrsquos a
long time but Irsquod just rather wait till I get out
Later in the interview Deon links his rising blood pressure to his isolation ldquoI never had
blood pressure problems until I went to this IMUrdquo Because Deon does not expect to be treated
with care or dignity he avoids medical treatment As a result his new breathing issues and ris-
ing blood pressure went unnoticed by medical staff and Deon did not find out the cause
Blake (white) described experiencing unfamiliar physical health symptoms in the IMU for
which he was also hopeless about receiving any medical assistance
Irsquove been told I have a heart murmur but for like last two weeks Irsquove been feeling my
heart like feeling weird like it flutters once in a while [I] just donrsquot tell nobody because
they wonrsquot do nothing about it unless yoursquore actually having a heart attack or unless you
declare a medical emergency theyrsquoll pull you out take your vitals and then charge you 4
bucks If I have a heart attack or donrsquot have a heart attack it donrsquot matter
Not only did Blake like Deon doubt whether a prison medical provider would believe him
and try to help him but he was further dissuaded from seeking treatment by the $4 institution-
ally-imposed cost for non-emergency treatment Four dollars is arguably worth much more in
prison that it would be even to a destitute person on the outside and worth more still to some-
one in the IMU Under WADOC policy people in IMU are only allowed to spend $10 per
week on store items such as coffee pastries and deodorant The $4 medical fee would absorb
nearly half of this weekly spending cap Blake might have had clinically insignificant subjective
palpitations or the onset of atrial fibrillation following an undiagnosed myocardial infarction
his confinement status rendered clarification functionally unavailable
Like many other participants Deon and Blake expressed a sense of futility about seeking
medical assistance while in the IMU dissuaded by bureaucratic hurdles from perceived dis-
missiveness and indignity (exemplified in the problem of dual loyalty [67]) to actual costs of
care Futility in turn led to non-evaluation of emerging medical problems Still Deon and
Blake expressed a passive acceptance of their situation ldquoitrsquos pointlessrdquo and ldquoit donrsquot matterrdquo
This hopelessness reflects a precarity unique to solitary confinement wondering whether med-
ications would be provided and refills renewed whether the severity of ailments would be
acknowledged and whether medical emergencies would be addressed or instead treated as
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 11 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
security threats As our participantsrsquo experiences suggest solitary confinement carries the
additional punishment of substandard access to health care
Exacerbating musculoskeletal pain Participants spoke frequently about one specific
chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain The experiences of people in
solitary confinement with chronic musculoskeletal pain reveal how the prior two categories of
symptoms we analyze those associated with deprivation conditions and those associated with
deprivation policies in solitary confinement interact to exacerbate physical health problems
While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical
injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated
and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to
them in solitary confinement
For instance Victor (Latino) described his frustrations with attempts to get care let alone
relief from the pain of his sciatica
Irsquove been told I have nothing wrong with me but I have been hurt and they took x-rays of
my back and they found that the disks are in there or something thatrsquos triggering some
nerves And I still got a little bit of time left and they just opened up an Ibuprofen right
now And that stuff doesnrsquot work So what can you do
Victorrsquos medical file highlights persistence of chronic pain in his back and hips and notes
that he avoided sitting down for longer than 5ndash10 minutes Not only did participants describe
untreated pain but they described the anxiety associated with the lack of treatment Isaac
(BlackLatino) described how he experienced both quad and hamstring pain in the IMU and
how this escalated his physical health concerns ldquoIrsquoll start thinking like oh Irsquom laying in bed
too much Maybe my muscles are starting to rot you know eating on themselvesrdquo In a similar
sentiment Tim (white) stated ldquoMy body is likendashI canrsquot explain it Like my skeleton feels like
my skeletonrsquos broken or somethingrdquo While Victor must bear persistent pain and the anxiety
that he will likely have to continue to suffer Isaac and Timrsquos experiences are more reflective of
somatization or the expression of psychological distress through physical symptoms [69]
These participants highlight the complex comorbidity between musculoskeletal pain and men-
tal health in isolation an inverse experience of physical pain Tyler (white) discussing his sco-
liosis made a direct connection between his untreated pain and his mental health ldquoMental
health and things that go through your head just because of this when you got pain shooting
up into your brain and you guys arenrsquot fixing itrdquo
Pain and anxiety in turn interfered with other aspects of IMU existence Craig (white)
described how an untreated knee injury was causing him ldquomoderate to severe painrdquo in combi-
nation with anxiety about how he would re-enter society when released directly from solitary
confinement together these experiences interfered with his everyday activities including his
ability to communicate with his family ldquoI was in the middle of actually writing my mom a let-
ter and I was going to tell her about you know they still havenrsquot done anything with my
knee I couldnrsquot write the letter anymore I just got so mad I was so mad I really couldnrsquot
even focus on anythingrdquo Craigrsquos medical file affirms his complaint documenting knee swell-
ing and chronic extension tendonitis but also indicating no abnormalities were found
People living in solitary confinement are left with very few options to effectively manage
persistent pain which appears to foster more maladaptive behavior such as rumination stress
and despair within a highly restrictive and stimuli-depleted environment [68ndash71] Along with
bearing the institutional monotony medical precariousness and procedural strictures of soli-
tary confinement onersquos own body becomes a challenge to withstand [72 73]
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 12 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
RacialEthnic disproportionalities
We now turn to reporting the race and ethnic disparities in the Washington state prison popu-
lation overall (compared to the statewide adult population) and in solitary confinement spe-
cifically (compared to the general prison population) These disparities suggest that the
various mechanisms by which solitary confinement impacts health and well-being are likely to
be disproportionately experienced across race and ethnic lines
We analyze administrative data provided by WADOC and Census Bureau population esti-
mates Black non-Latino individuals represented only 37 of adults in Washington state in
2017 but they comprised 179 of the general prison population [74] Similarly Latino indi-
viduals represented 103 of the statewide adult population but 136 of the prison popula-
tion Conversely both White non-Latinos and AsianPacific Islanders Native Americans and
mixed-race individuals (grouped within ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo) were somewhat under-repre-
sented in the general prison population relative to the statewide adult population (see Fig 1)
Differences in racial and ethnic composition of the general prison population and the state-
wide adult population are statistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Within prison walls we find evidence of further racial and ethnic disproportionalities in
housing placement Comparing those housed in restrictive IMU confinement to those housed
in the general population we find that prisoners who self-identify as ldquoLatino Any Racerdquo and
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo ethnicity are over-represented in IMU To characterize the scale of differ-
ences in the racialethnic composition of the IMU and general prison populations we calcu-
lated disproportionality or prevalence ratios as the proportion of each racialethnic group in a
given population divided by the proportion of that racialethnic group in the reference popu-
lation Here Latinos are over-represented within the IMU participant group by a factor of 17
relative to their representation in the general prison population and those grouped in the
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo category are over-represented in the IMU sample by a factor of 26 relative
to the general prison population Conversely White non-Latino individuals are under-repre-
sented in the IMU sample relative to the general prison population Likewise and in contrast
to the gross disproportionality documented in the general prison population Black non-
Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample relative to the gen-
eral prison population 113 of the IMU sample identified as Black non-Latino compared
with 179 of the general prison population The difference in the racial and ethnic composi-
tion of those in long-term solitary confinement compared with the general population was sta-
tistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Discussion
A popular analogy likens prison to a chronic illness it disrupts daily life interrupts routines
[72] spreads risk like a contagious disease [75] and models like an epidemiological problem
[76 30] While the study of the physical effects of incarceration has developed over the last
decade there is a serious gap in the literature in understanding the experiences and outcomes
of physical health in isolation We are just beginning to understand the medical correlates of
solitary confinement their comorbidity with mental health and overall implications for pris-
onersrsquo suffering [72] Integrating surveys interviews BPRS scores medical and disciplinary
file reviews and administrative data the scale and array of our research represents one of the
more robust studies of solitary confinement to date [20] The multi-method research presented
here offers a first step not only towards understanding some typical medical problems of soli-
tary confinement but also towards understanding the analytical challenges of an environment
in which physical and psychological problems are immediately concomitant and objective
clarification is often unavailable
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 13 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Fig 1 Racial and ethnic composition of IMU sample general prison population and Washington State 2017 US Census Bureau
Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and
States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun dagger Authorsrsquo calculations The total prison population file included 17943 individuals in
DOC prison custody on July 1 2017 For comparison purposes the ldquogeneral prison populationrdquo excludes those returned to prison on
violations of release or sentence conditions those in an IMU unit on the index date and those on a maximum custody status (n = 1970)
as well as those in the IMU sample (n = 106) Dagger No significant differences in racialethnic composition were found between the IMU
sample and larger IMU population on the index date using raceethnicity data from DOC These data reflect self-reported raceethnicity
during participant interviews ^ OtherUnknown includes individuals of two or more races AsianPacific Islander Native American
Alaska Native and unknown raceethnicity information
httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510g001
We find that solitary confinement constitutes not just a mental but also a physical health
risk It exacerbates well-documented physical health ldquosymptomsrdquo of incarceration from dis-
ruptions of daily life and routines to undiagnosed untreated or mis-treated ailments [1 30
38] These initial symptoms in turn produce other risks to the extent respondents are accu-
rately reporting weight fluctuations in solitary confinement this physical symptom has detri-
mental health implications weight fluctuation itself is associated with adverse cardiovascular
and psychological outcomes [77 78] Likewise musculoskeletal pain increases multimorbidity
and its sequelae are tightly unified in their impact on disability [79]
These health concerns likely have a grossly disparate impact on communities of color just
as incarceration is a health stratifying institution for prisoners their families and communi-
ties so too does solitary confinement appear to exacerbate racial health inequities While we
find that Black non-Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample
relative to the general prison population we find that Latino and OtherMixed Race prisoners
are disproportionately over-represented in solitary confinement in WADOC just as other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 14 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
studies have documented disproportionately high representations of racial and ethnic minori-
ties in other statesrsquo uses of solitary confinement [22 41 43] We further find that prisoners of
all races describe similar physical health challenges and complaints while in solitary confine-
ment In sum people of color face a disproportionate risk of being placed in solitary confine-
ment such racial disparities in turn mean that the physical health symptoms associated with
or possibly caused by these conditions of confinement are likely to fall disproportionately on
certain groups Though we do not explore other risk factors for over-representation in solitary
confinement in this paper we and others have documented serious mental illness [20 80]
transgender identification [81] and pregnant women [82] as particularly vulnerable to both
incarceration and solitary confinement suggesting additional sub-groups who might face dis-
proportionate and unique risks of physical health problems in solitary confinement
If anything the evidence we present here understates the prevalence and intensity of the symp-
toms we document First Washington State is a progressive system actively engaged in both limit-
ing the application and the duration of solitary confinement and developing measures to mitigate
its harmful effects from better mental health training for correctional staff to more sustained
group contact for prisoners in IMUs conditions and their physical effects are undoubtedly
worse in many if not most other states [20 42 44] Second the BPRS somatic concerns scores
we present focus on the two weeks prior to assessment so likely underrepresent the cumulative
incidence of somatic concerns in the study sample over time Third our exceptionally large ran-
dom sample size for an in-depth mixed methods study of a solitary confinement population was
still not powered to establish statistically significant differences between interview subjects in the
IMU in year one (2017) and those out of the IMU in year two (2018)ndashotherwise important com-
parison groups for understanding differences in either somatic concerns measures or physical
symptom specifications Fourth both the Washington state population and state prison popula-
tion have proportionately more white people than some other states and prisons where racial dis-
parities in both prison and solitary confinement may be even more significant
While our findings do not establish either how prevalent the symptoms and mechanisms of
suffering we specified are among people in solitary confinement as compared to the general
prison population or whether solitary confinement in fact directly causes these symptoms
recent research suggests that at least some of the symptoms our respondents reported like
hypertension are significantly associated with long-term isolation [83 45] Although the evi-
dence is clear that solitary confinement poses serious health risks [54 45] our research high-
lights the importance of continuing to document and analyze these risks especially from a
multi-method perspective triangulating administrative population-level data with objective
scales like the BPRS subjective descriptions of experiences from surveys and interviews and
corroboration from medical file reviews
First documenting physical health problems provides a critical means to elucidate the sever-
ity of deprivations in treatment environmental conditions and exercise and nutrition [84 85]
inherent in solitary confinement If incarceration is experienced fundamentally through control
and restriction of the body this is all the more true in solitary confinement where prisoners are
subjected to extreme forms of control while being entirely reliant on others for accessing basic
necessities from food to healthcare Our participants experienced the deprivations of solitary
confinement as exacerbating their health problems which shaped their health experiences as
punitive Otherwise medically trivial conditions quickly become grave in solitary ldquodandruffrdquo
can become a bleeding scalp wound a four-dollar co-payment blurs the difference between sub-
jective palpitations and an unstable arrhythmia and unused muscles ldquorotrdquo Physical suffering
reveals itself to be a crucial dimension of experience in solitary confinement
Second to the extent physical symptoms in particular are more familiar more readily
labeled and less stigmatized than mental health issues they may provide a window into other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 15 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
less physically tangible pains of confinement in solitary or elsewhere [84 85] The visuality of
spectacular forms of suffering in carceral institutions is only made possible by and through
mundane phenomenon that our participants elucidate through their discussions of everyday
physical experiences [86] Indeed attending to peoplersquos physical health in solitary confinement
reveals the irreducible relationship between the body mental health and highly restrictive
conditions of confinement Whether they exercise to the point of physical debilitation to keep
their minds busy refuse to eat because they do not trust their food is safe or avoid medical
care out of a hopelessness of being treated with dignity the physical and psychological are inti-
mately bounded in peoplersquos experiences in prison Examining physical suffering in solitary
confinement then becomes a tool for understanding suffering in prison more broadly and
especially the comorbidity of physical and mental suffering
Third the challenges we document in identifying and specifying physical symptoms in soli-
tary confinement reveal not just the interrelationship between symptoms conditions and poli-
cies but institutional mechanisms exacerbating both the identification and treatment of
physical problems in prison In many cases our respondents had no hope of establishing what
was physically wrong with them let alone whether the conditions of their confinement caused
the physical ailments because they either could not get or avoided medical treatment While
both community standard and continuity of care is an issue in prison generally [67] solitary
confinement widens these service gaps The phenomenon of dual loyalty which describes how
the patient-provider relationship within prison can be subsumed by correctional directives of
control and mistrust of incarcerated people [67] is acutely relevant in the context of solitary
confinement where both control and mistrust are especially prevalent [87 88]
In sum examining solitary confinement and documenting its affects provides an important
magnifying lens for understanding prison and its affects more broadly not only in elucidating
the mechanisms of harm but also in developing responses to mitigate these harms Ninety-five
percent or more of all prisoners will eventually return home to our communities [4 5] and
many will have spent time in solitary confinement Nearly one-in-five people in prison spends
time in solitary confinement each year and one-in-ten spends 30 days or more in these condi-
tions [3] These numbers will only increase in the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic
which has justified facility-wide ldquolockdownsrdquo imposing restrictions similar to those in soli-
tary-confinement in prisons across the United States as well as actual solitary confinement
placements for infected and exposed prisoners [89] To the extent that solitary confinement
undercuts treatment and care in and beyond prison it undermines the public health of those
incarcerated and those returning to our communities
Supporting information
S1 Text IMU survey
(PDF)
S2 Text Interview instrument
(DOC)
S1 Checklist Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ) 32-item
checklist
(DOCX)
S1 Quotations
(DOCX)
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 16 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Author Contributions
Conceptualization Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter
Formal analysis Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Methodology Justin D Strong Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Project administration Justin D Strong
Writing ndash original draft Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca
Tublitz Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie
Pifer Thomas R Blair
Writing ndash review amp editing Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Dallas Augustine Melissa Bar-
ragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie Pifer Thomas R Blair
References
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4 Administrators Association of State Correctional Administrators Yale Law School Arthur Liman Public
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7 Grassian S Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Wash UJL amp Polrsquoy 2006 22325ndash84
8 Kupers TA What to do with the survivors Coping with the long-term effects of isolated confinement
Crim Justice Behav 2008 Aug 35(8)1005ndash16
9 Griffin E Breaking menrsquos minds Behavior control and human experimentation at the federal prison in
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PLOS ONE The body in isolation
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30 Wildeman C Wang EA Mass incarceration public health and widening inequality in the USA Lancet
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N Engl J Med 2011 Jun 2 364(22)2081ndash83 httpsdoiorg101056NEJMp1102385 PMID 21631319
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of health for Black men in the United States Sociol Compass 2018 Mar 12(3)e12566
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ing DC (US) National Institute of Justice 2018 21 p Report No 252062
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42 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States
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43 Schlanger M Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial disparities
Mich J Race amp L 2012 18(1)241ndash50
44 Reiter KA Parole snitch or die Californiarsquos supermax prisons and prisoners 1997ndash2007 Punishm
Soc 2012 Dec 14(5)530ndash63
45 Williams BA Li A Ahalt C Coxson P Kahn JG Bibbins-Domingo K The cardiovascular health burdens
of solitary confinement J Gen Intern Med 2019 Oct 1 34(10)1977ndash80 httpsdoiorg101007
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46 Dye MH Deprivation importation and prison suicide combined effects of institutional conditions and
inmate composition J Crim Justice 2010 Jul 1 38(4)796ndash806
47 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S Hadler J Lee D Alper H et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-
harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014 Mar 104(3)442ndash7 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH
2013301742 PMID 24521238
48 Lobel J Akil H Law amp neuroscience The case of solitary confinement Daedalus 2018 Oct1 47(4)61ndash75
49 Zigmond MJ Smeyne RJ Use of animals to study the neurobiological effects of isolation In Lobel J
Smith PS editors Solitary confinement Effects practices and pathways toward reform New York
Oxford University Press 2020 [cited 2020 Jul 14] Chapter 13
50 Stahn AC Gunga HC Kohlberg E Gallinat J Dinges DF Kuhn S Brain changes in response to long
Antarctic expeditions N Engl J Med 2019 Dec 5 381(23)2273ndash5 httpsdoiorg101056
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51 Smith DG Neuroscientists make a case against solitary confinement prolonged social isolation can do
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52 Ranapurwala SI Shanahan ME Alexandridis AA Proescholdbell SK Naumann RB Edwards D Jr
et al Opioid overdose mortality among former North Carolina inmates 2000ndash2015 Am J Public Health
2018 Sep 108(9)1207ndash13 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2018304514 PMID 30024795
53 Wildeman C Andersen LH Solitary confinement placement and post-release mortality risk among for-
merly incarcerated individuals a population-based study Lancet Public Health 2020 Feb 1 5(2)e107ndash
13 httpsdoiorg101016S2468-2667(19)30271-3 PMID 32032555
54 Brinkley-Rubinstein L Sivaraman J Rosen DL Cloud DH Junker G Proescholdbell S et al Associa-
tion of restrictive housing during incarceration with mortality after release JAMA Netw Open 2019 Oct
2 2(10)e1912516 Available from httpsjamanetworkcomjournalsjamanetworkopenarticle-
abstract2752350 httpsdoiorg101001jamanetworkopen201912516 PMID 31584680
55 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional populations in the United States 2016 Washington DC Depart-
ment of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 14 p Report No NCJ
251211
56 Phipps PA Gagliardi GJ Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and ser-
vices Interim Report Olympia WA Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 May 37 p
Report No 03-05-1901
57 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J of Public Health 2005 Oct 95
(10)1692ndash5
58 Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates Santa Monica CA The
Rand Corporation 1982 Nov Report No N-1635-NIJ
59 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berke-
ley CA University of California Press 2014
60 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up meth-
ods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs 2009 Sep 70
(5)751ndash61 httpsdoiorg1015288jsad200970751 PMID 19737500
61 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach popula-
tion Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2016 May 17 113(20)5477ndash85
62 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation
and normalization in Danish prisons Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
63 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis Thousand
Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
64 Chun Tie Y Birks M Francis K Grounded theory research A design framework for novice researchers
SAGE open medicine 2019 Jan 71ndash8
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65 Berzofsky M and Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) Sample Design Evaluation and Rec-
ommendations Washington DC US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017
66 Nwosu BU Maranda L Berry R Colocino B Flores CD Sr Folkman K et al The vitamin D status of
prison inmates PloS one 2014 Mar 5 9(3)e90623 httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0090623
PMID 24598840
67 Pont J Enggist S Stover H Williams B Greifinger R Wolff H Prison health care governance guaran-
teeing clinical independence American journal of public health 2018 Apr 108(4)472ndash6 httpsdoiorg
102105AJPH2017304248 PMID 29470125
68 Brosschot JF Gerin W Thayer JF The perseverative cognition hypothesis A review of worry pro-
longed stress-related physiological activation and health Journal of psychosomatic research 2006
Feb 1 60(2)113ndash24 httpsdoiorg101016jjpsychores200506074 PMID 16439263
69 Stemmet L Roger D Kuntz J Borrill J Ruminating about the past or ruminating about the futuremdash
which has the bigger impact on health An exploratory study Current Psychology 2018 Jan 13 1ndash7
70 Laws B Crewe B Emotion regulation among male prisoners Theoretical Criminology 2016 Nov 20
(4)529ndash47
71 Greer K Walking an emotional tightrope Managing emotions in a womenrsquos prison Symbolic Interac-
tion 2002 Feb 25(1)117ndash39
72 Choudhry K Armstrong D Dregan A Prisons and Embodiment Self-Management Strategies of an
Incarcerated Population Journal of Correctional Health Care 2019 Oct 25(4)338ndash50 httpsdoiorg
1011771078345819880240 PMID 31722608
73 Western B Homeward Life in the year after prison Russell Sage Foundation 2018 May 4
74 US Census Bureau Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age
Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun
75 Lum K Swarup S Eubank S Hawdon J The contagious nature of imprisonment an agent-based
model to explain racial disparities in incarceration rates Journal of the Royal Society Interface 2014
Sep 6 11(98)20140409
76 Dumont DM Brockmann B Dickman S Alexander N Rich JD Public health and the epidemic of incar-
ceration Annual review of public health 2012 Apr 21 33325ndash39 httpsdoiorg101146annurev-
publhealth-031811-124614 PMID 22224880
77 Zhang Y Hou F Li J Yu H Li L Hu S et al The association between weight fluctuation and all-cause
mortality A systematic review and meta-analysis Medicine 2019 Oct 98(42)
78 Soslashrensen TI Rissanen A Korkeila M Kaprio J Intention to lose weight weight changes and 18-y mor-
tality in overweight individuals without co-morbidities PLoS medicine 2005 Jun 28 2(6)e171 https
doiorg101371journalpmed0020171 PMID 15971946
79 Blyth FM Briggs AM Schneider CH Hoy DG March LM The global burden of musculoskeletal painmdash
where to from here American journal of public health 2019 Jan 01 09(1)35ndash40
80 Patler C Sacha JO Branic N The black box within a black box Solitary confinement practices in a sub-
set of US immigrant detention facilities Journal of Population Research 2018 Dec 354 httpsdoi
org101007s12546-018-9209-8
81 Andasheva F Arenrsquot I a Woman Deconstructing Sex Discrimination and Freeing Transgender Women
from Solitary Confinement FIU L Rev 2016 12117
82 Knittel AK Resolving health disparities for women involved in the criminal justice system North Carolina
medical journal 2019 Nov 01 80(6)363ndash6 httpsdoiorg1018043ncm806363 PMID 31685574
83 Hawkley Test Ashker v Governor of California No 409-cv-05796-CW (ND California 2015)
84 Sexton L Penal subjectivities Developing a theoretical framework for penal consciousness Punish-
ment amp Society 2015 Jan 17(1)114ndash36
85 Crewe B Warr J Bennett P Smith A The emotional geography of prison life Theoretical Criminology
2014 Feb 18(1)56ndash74
86 Corcoran MS Spectacular suffering Transgressive performance in penal activism Theoretical Crimi-
nology 2019 Jan 11 httpsdoiorg1011771362480618819796
87 Glowa-Kollisch S Graves J Dickey N MacDonald R Rosner Z Waters A et al Data- driven human
rights using dual loyalty trainings to promote the care of vulnerable patients in jail Health Hum Rights
2015 Jun 1 17(1)124ndash35
88 Blair TR Reiter KA Letter to the editor and author response Solitary confinement and mental illness
Perspectives 2015 Jul 2
89 Cloud D Augustine D Ahalt C Williams B The ethical use of medical isolationndashnot solitary confine-
mentndashto reduce COVID-19 transmission in correctional settings AMEND 2020 April
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 20 20
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE
See next page
112
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
Psychological Distress in Solitary Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018
Keramet Reiter PhD JD Joseph Ventura PhD David Lovell PhD MSW Dallas Augustine MA Melissa Barragan MA Thomas Blair MD MS Kelsie Chesnut MA Pasha Dashtgard MA EdM Gabriela Gonzalez MA Natalie Pifer PhD JD and Justin Strong MA
Objectives To specify symptoms and measure prevalence of psychological distress among incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement
Methods We gathered data via semistructured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric
Rating Scale (BPRS) assessments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for 106 randomly selected people in solitary confinement in the Washington State
Department of Corrections in 2017 We performed 1-year follow-up interviews
and BPRS assessments with 80 of these incarcerated people and we present the
results of our qualitative content analysis and descriptive statistics Results BPRS results showed clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety or
guilt among half of our research sample Administrative data showed disproportionately
high rates of serious mental illness and self-harming behavior compared with general prison populations Interview content analysis revealed additional symptoms including
social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity Conclusions Our coordinated study of rating scale interview and administrative data
illustrates the public health crisis of solitary confinement Because 95 or more of all incarcerated people including those who experienced solitary confinement are even-tually released understanding disproportionate psychopathology matters for de-veloping prevention policies and addressing the unique needs of people who have
experienced solitary confinement an extreme element of mass incarceration (Am J
Public Health 2020110S56ndashS62 doi102105AJPH2019305375)
few procedural protections limited available alternative responses and no external over-sight2 Researchers and policymakers are therefore limited not only in access to data and populations but also by these populationsrsquo fluidity
A standard instrument for assessing psy-chological impacts of incarceration is the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) Originally developed to rate the severity of symptoms in hospitalized psychiatric patients and track changes in status over time1314 the BPRS is increasingly used for research within carceral settings12151617 The current scale assesses 24 observable or self-reported symptoms Extensive research on the BPRSrsquos reliability and validity confirms its efficacy in identify-ing indicators of serious mental illness14
In Washington State interviewers ad-ministered the BPRS to a random sample of 87 incarcerated people during qualitative interviews (and also conducted 122 medical chart reviews)1915 concluding that solitary confinement reveals ldquoa concentration of some of the most important negative effects of the entire prison complexrdquo1(p1692) In a widely cited subsequent study in Colorado the BPRS was included in a battery of tests designed to measure psychological ldquocon-structsrdquo associated with solitary confinement (for 270 matched participants) but generated
Long-term solitary confinement expanded across the United States in the 1980s by
1997 nearly every state had built a ldquosuper-maxrdquo creating an estimated total of 20 000 new solitary cells12 Human rights agencies characterize the practice as torture34 policy analysts criticize it as expensive and ineffec-tive24 Yet the epidemiological basis for understanding solitary confinement is weak Current estimates of the annual US solitary confinement population vary from 80 000 to 250 00056 Likewise the conditions (how much isolation with how few privileges) purposes (discipline protection or institu-tional security) and labels (administrative segregation supermax restrictive housing intensive management) defining solitary confinement are contested256 Many studies document psychological harms of
S56 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al
segregation including associations between solitary confinement and self-harm anxiety depression paranoia and aggression among other symptoms7ndash9 but other recent find-ings suggest that psychological impacts are limited10ndash12 Correctional officials use solitary confinement at their discretion often with
ABOUT THE AUTHORS Keramet Reiter is with the Department of Criminology Law and Society and the School of Law University of California Irvine Joseph Ventura is with the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles David Lovell is with the School of Nursing University of Washington Seattle Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut and Gabriela Gonzalez are doctoral candidates in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Thomas Blair is with the Department of Psychiatry Southern California Permanente Medical Group Downey Pasha Dashtgard is a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological Science University of California Irvine Natalie Pifer is with the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice University of Rhode Island Kingston Justin Strong is a doctoral student in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine
Correspondence should be sent to Keramet Reiter 3373 Social Ecology II Irvine CA 92697 (e-mail reiterkuciedu) Reprints can be ordered at httpwwwajphorg by clicking the ldquoReprintsrdquo link
This article was accepted September 5 2019 doi 102105AJPH2019305375
AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
few reliable results The study relied on a pencil-and-paper test the Brief Symptom Inventory ldquoa 53-item self-report measure to assess a broad range of psychological symptomsrdquo and concluded that people in solitary confinement sometimes experienced improvements in their psychological well-being and those with mental illnesses did not deteriorate over time11(p52)
Our study builds on these investigations relying not only on psychometric instruments but also on mental and physical health and dis-ciplinary records and in-depth interview data to assess the psychological well-being of 106 ran-domly sampled incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections (WADOC) from 2017 to 2018 Triangulation of sources gives this study a robust basis for understanding the psy-chological effects of solitary confinement
METHODS WADOC is a midsized (39th highest rate
of incarceration in the United States) fully state-funded correctional system with a long history of inviting academic researchers to independently evaluate carceral practice191819
Fieldwork was conducted over 2 separate 3-week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team mem-bers (9 women and 4 men) all affiliated with the University of California Irvine In total 106 incarcerated people were inter-viewed in 2017 and 80 incarcerated people were reinterviewed in 2018 We also collected medical and disciplinary data including serious mental illness (SMI) and self-harm data
Sample and Data Collections WADOC has 5 geographically dispersed
intensive management units (IMUs) people in these all-male units have usually violated an in-prison rule and are in solitary confinement for durations ranging from months to years with highly restricted access to phones radios televisions time out of cell and visitors As a result of WADOC efforts to reform and re-duce IMU use the population in these units fluctuated with a high of more than 600 (in 2011) to a low of 286 incarcerated people (in 2015) on ldquomaximum custodyrdquo status for indeterminate terms contingent on meeting
specific benchmarks20 In 2017 when the initial sample for this research was drawn there were 363 maximum custody status people assigned to the IMU
We selected participants from a randomly ordered list in proportion to the population of each IMU accounting for 29 of the total population in each of the 5 units For recruitment and consent processes see Ap-pendix A (available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg) The interview refusal rate was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people921
The 96-question semistructured interview instrument included a range of questions used in previous studies on incarcerated peoplersquos experiences2223 covering condi-tions of daily life physical and mental health treatment and IMU programming BPRS self-report items were embedded throughout the interview we evaluated observational items immediately following each in-terview24 Interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 3 hours
Following interviews participants were given an option to consent to medical file reviews and to participate in 1-year follow-up interviews All participants consented to rein-terviews and all but 2 participants (n = 104) consented to medical file reviews Following year-1 interviews WADOC provided elec-tronic administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants (along with comparable population-level data for the prison system in 2017)
In summer 2018 the research team returned to Washington and reconsented and reinterviewed every available participant mdashnotably including those no longer housed in the IMUmdashfor a total of 80 reinterviews Because of refusals (n = 4) institutional trans-fers and parole (n = 21) and 1 death we were unable to follow-up with 26 respondents (25) This drop-out rate is low compared with similar studies2526 Follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 2 hours The condensed year-2 instrument contained ap-proximately 70 questions with variation by current housing status
For the steps taken to protect vulnerable imprisoned research participants and details of the training research team members com-pleted establishing high interrater reliability in administering the BPRS24 see Appendix A
(available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg)
Data Analysis All interviews were assigned a randomly
generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed in Microsoft Word (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details (names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software De-velopment GmbH Berlin Germany) for analysis See Appendix A for an explanation of the thematically grounded open-coding process27 We entered all BPRS paper rating sheets completed following year-1 and year-2 interviews into Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) We linked each participantrsquos BPRS rating by random identifier to extracted data from qualitative interviews medical file reviews and administrative data from WADOC
Relevant variables extracted from ad-ministrative health data included SMI a critical classification because it implies that treatment is medically necessary and there-fore is an obligation of the prison system while the person is under its care WADOC operationally defines SMI by standardized criteria combining diagnosis medication and frequency of psychiatric encounters and history of suicide attempts or other self-harm
We then imported BPRS and other administrative data into SPSS version 26 (IBM Armonk NY) to generate descriptive statistics including prevalence of clinically significant ratings on BPRS items and factors (subscales of co-occurring symptom groups) including positive symptoms (un-usual thought content hallucinations con-ceptual disorganization) negative symptoms (blunted affect emotional withdrawal motor retardation) depression-anxiety-guilt symptoms (including somatic concerns DAGS) and mania (excitability elevated mood hyperactivity distractibility)14 We ran correlational analyses (cross-tabs and t test) to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings and other independent assess-ments of well-being such as existing diagnosis of SMI
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S57
mdash
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
RESULTS See Table 1 for summary characteristics of
the all-male participant population (there are
TABLE 1 Characteristics of Sample of People in Solitary Confinement Compared With General Prison Population Washington State Department of Corrections 2017
no women in IMUs in WADOC) and the IMU Population (n = 106) General Population (n = 16 465)a
general WADOC population As in other Age y studies of solitarily confined incarcerated Mean 35 40 people6 our sample was generally younger Median 34 38 more violent (in terms of criminal history) and Range 20ndash65 18ndash94 serving longer sentences than those in the general population Latinos and gang affiliates are both overrepresented in our IMU sample likely because of the salience of conflicts among rival Latino factions as an institutional security concern2 Although our IMU par-ticipants differed from the general prison population there were no significant differences in either demographic variables or criminal history characteristics between our random
Raceethnicity (no)
White
African American
Latino
Other
IMU length of stay
Mean
Median
Range
42 (44)
12 (12)
23 (24)
23 (24)
145 mo
6 mo
lt 1 wkndash151 mo
59 (9746)
18 (2935)
14 (2276)
9 (1508)
sample and the overall IMU population Current offense category (no)
except that our participant pool was slightly Murder and manslaughter 17 (18) 16 (2623)
older than the overall IMU population Sex offenses 12 (13) 19 (3195)
Robbery and assault 57 (60) 34 (5608)
Property offenses 8 (9) 18 (2933) Range and Prevalence of Drugs or other 6 (6) 13 (2106)
Psychological Symptoms Identified Prison convictionsb
Our initial sample of 106 participants had a Mean 5 4 mean BPRS rating of 37 and a median rating Median 4 3 of 33 (possible range from 24 to 168) sug- Range 1ndash18 1ndash27 gesting mild psychiatric symptoms among the study population at the time of our inter-views14 However analysis of individual scale items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms (Table 2) Further analysis of BPRS factors as opposed to individual items provided
Prison length of stay mo
Mean
Median
Range
Ever in prison gangc (no)
Yes
No
Missing
103
72
3ndash456
60 (64)
36 (38)
4 (4)
97
45
2ndash600
32 (5410)
68 (11 659)
additional evidence of clinically significant Serious mental illnessd (no) 19 (16) 9 (1589)
psychiatric distress in as much as half of the Self-harm attempte (no) 18 (17) Not available population sampled (ie DAGS factor Suicide attempte (no) 22 (22) Not available Table 2)
Administrative data support the finding Note IMU = intensive management unit
of long-term psychological distress Among aGeneral population data excludes 761 categories returned to prison for techn
nonsentenced and 718 resentencical violations of conditions on un
ed incarcerated people Both derlying drug or sex offenses
our respondents 19 had SMI designations a politically selective and narrow set of offenses that would distort the general population primary
22 had a documented suicide attempt and offense profile
18 had documentation of other self-harm bNumber of convictions to prison excluding out-of-state convictions often significant for IMU residents
all at some point during their incarceration cGang status was self-reported Figure is calculated from 102 respondents
ided for 85 respondents figure i
who disclosed this information
either before or during their time in the IMU dSerious mental illness data were prov s calculated from this sample
(Table 1) Moreover respondents with SMI eSelf-harm and suicide data were provided for 94 respondents figure is calculated from this sample
designations were much more likely to re-port positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms Qualitative interview data revealed and will be considered exhaustively in sub-than non-SMI respondents (Table 3) These symptoms not otherwise captured by the sequent analyses) Two classes of symptoms
ndentsfindings support the validity of the BPRS BPRS and medical files (Such data will be were reported by a majority of respoassessments used illustratively here for reasons of space descriptions of the severity of the emotional
S58 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
mdash
ndash
mdash
ndash
TABLE 2 Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Symptom and Factor Prevalence Washington State Department of Corrections 2017 2018
IMU 2017 (n = 106) (No) IMU 2018 (n = 28) (No) Non-IMU 2018 (n = 52) (No)
Symptomsa
Depression 2450 (26)
Anxiety 2450 (26)
Somatic concern 1510 (16)
Guilt 1790 (19)
Hostility 1130 (12)
Hallucinations 940 (10)
Excitement 1040 (11)
2500 (7) 1538 (8)
3214 (9) 2885 (15)
2143 (6) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 1731 (9)
1429 (4) 1154 (6)
1429 (4) 769 (4)
Factorsb
Positive 1600 (17) 1786 (5) 1154 (6) stitution taking over their identity
Negative 470 (5) 0 (0) 192 (1) Irsquove been in the hole so long that it defines the DAGS 4910 (52) 5357 (15) 3654 (19) person If yoursquove been in the box for so long you Mania 1700 (18) 1481 (4) 1731 (9) canrsquot play well with others Wersquore so confined
Note DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization IMU = intensive management unit in that box Itrsquos like a safety blanket (Eli)
mania = elevated memotional withdrawal and motor retarand conceptual disorganization aOnly clinically significant symptoms (raof the sample are presented
ood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement dation positive = hallucinations unu
ting of 4 or higher) that were repor
negative = blunted affect sual thought content
ted by 10 or more
Another respondent echoed a frequent complaint about the lack of mirrors con-tributing to the loss of identity
bFactors combine 3
toll of being in the cumulatively the times) and feeling
or 4 different symptoms that are
IMU (80 of respondents topic was mentioned 359 s of social isolation (73
commonly associated
And this quotatiisolation
Yoursquore not around
with one another14
on exemplifies social
people Irsquom around
This IMU has mirrors in the cell The majority of them do not And it gets really stressful when you canrsquot even see your own reflection I mean when you canrsquot even look at yourself you lose some of your self-identity (Eric)
of respondents cmentioned 192 ticerpt exemplifies descriptions
I bet you couldnrsquot the stuff you got tpain Therersquos a lo[and] Irsquove been doadapt to their surrthis life I donrsquot [tpseudonym as wi
TABLE 3 SerioPrevalence Was
Positive
Negative
DAGS
umulatively the t
the ldquoemotional t
walk in my shoes beo endure behind these walls of t you got to go through ing this for 11 years oundings but to get hink] you can (Michth all subsequent qu
us Mental Illness Shington State De
SMI (n
opic was mes) This interview ex-
ollrdquo
cause all
people used to ael a otations)
tatus and 20partment of
= 16) (No
50 (8)
630 (1)
5630 (9)
somebody right noand shackles on like dehumanizing No human being I feel land it does have an while yoursquore sitting
Two additional alent as other clinicitems like anxiety hypersensitivity (16
17 Brief Psychiatric
)
w with handcuffs Irsquom an animal Itrsquos human contact As [a] ike wersquore meant to socialize effect on your mentality in the cell (Chase)
symptoms were as prev-ally significant BPRS references to sensory of respondents
Rating Scale Factor Corrections 2017 2018
Non-SMI (n = 69) (No
1014 (7)
440 (3)
4780 (33)
Comparing Symptoms in and out of Solitary Confinement (2018)
Of the 80 respondents reinterviewed in the second year of this study 28 were in IMU custody and 52 were in the general prison population These 2 subpopulations provide important comparison groups between IMU residents and people in the general popula-tion because all initially entered the study through a random sample of IMU residents These subpopulations also provide a longi-tudinal view of how incarcerated people experience IMU conditions over 1 year and how they recover from these conditions ) as they re-enter the general population In Table 2 we compare cumulatively by sub-population symptom and factor scores in 2017 for IMU residents to 2018 scores for
Mania
Populationa
Note DAGS = deprehyperactivity and excitement negative positive = hallucinatmental illness aMental health data
ssion anxiety guilt
1875 (3)
1880 (16)
= blunted affeht content anions unusual thoug
were available only for 85 of 10
and somatization mania = elevated mct emotional withdrawd conceptual disorgan
13 (9)
8120 (69)
ood distractibility motor al and motor retardation ization SMI = serious
6 sampled incarcerated people
IMU respondents and respondents not in the IMU For respondents still in the IMU in 2018 all clinically significant symptoms that were prevalent among at least 10 of the pop-ulation were at least as prevalent in 2018 and 2 clinically significant factor scores were more prevalent (positive DAGS) For respondents
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S59
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Respondents discussed hy-persensitivity to sounds smells ldquo[and ] tiny thingsrdquo (Giovanni) In particular the sounds of doors opening and closing aggravated many respondents
All you got to do is hold it I mean you donrsquot got to slam it Itrsquos like [correctional officers] showing their power That ainrsquot cool You wouldnrsquot do that in your house would you (Tyler)
Respondents also talked about the in-
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
not in the IMU in 2018 the prevalence of clinically significant symptoms varied from more prevalent than in the 2017 sample (eg anxiety) to less prevalent (eg somatic con-cerns and guilt) and factor scores were either lower (ie positive negative DAGS) or similar (for mania) for respondents not in the IMU in 2018 Despite having an excep-tionally large sample size for a study of a solitary confinement population our study was not powered to establish statistically significant dif-ferences between the 2017 and 2018 data sets
DISCUSSION In this study we combined qualitative
interview data with structured quantitative measures of psychological and psychiatric outcomes in solitary confinement among 106 randomly sampled incarcerated people in Washington State documenting both a wide range and high prevalence of symptoms of psychological distress We highlight 4 major implications of this
First while the overall BPRS ratings we analyzed indicated limited psychological distress as documented in earlier studies1112
a closer examination of specific items and factors revealed that as many as half of re-spondents had at least 1 clinically significant symptom within the BPRS anxietyndashdepression factor Because other studies using the BPRS in solitary confinement settings employed earlier 18-item versions of the scale15 used the scale in combination with other scales11 or analyzed only total ratings12 our findings are not directly comparable with those in other BPRS studies However our findings are consistent with other studies including findings that 20 or more of Washington incarcerated people in solitary exhibited a ldquomarked or severe degree of distressrdquo15(p774) and that more than half of California incarcerated people in soli-tary reported ldquosymptoms of psychological distressrdquo28(p133) Our findings therefore high-light the importance of analyzing specific components of BPRS scores and not only aggregates which mask variation in both prevalence and severity of specific symptoms
Second administrative data confirmed that our participants had relatively high rates of documented mental health problems including rates of SMI and self-harming behavior (Table 1) SMI rates typically
estimated at 10 to 15 of prison pop-ulations829 are measured at 9 in Wash-ingtonrsquos general prison population but 20 in our IMU sample Likewise our qualitative data confirmed that people in solitary con-finement experience symptoms specific to those conditions not captured in standard psychiatric assessment instruments30 Both findings suggest an affirmative answer to the question of whether solitary confinement is associated with more and worse psycho-pathology than general population confine-ment As longitudinal case studies have illustrated930 disproportionate representa-tion of incarcerated people with psychopa-thology in solitary confinement reflects the interaction of clinical and security factors in prison custody decisions solitary confine-ment responds to behavior expressing psy-chopathology often undiagnosed and also aggravates the propensity of some incarcer-ated people to break down or act out31 For these reasons the causal role of solitary confinement is not established by aggre-gate comparisons of IMU and non-IMU populations
Third the comparisons we were able to make across multiple sources of data allowed us to identify a broader range of symptoms of distress than studies that have focused on only 1 or 2 sources of data such as administrative data8 psychiatric assessments11 or qualitative interviews2830 Symptoms such as anxiety and depression were especially prevalent in this population along with symptoms os-tensibly specific to solitary confinement such as sensory hypersensitivity and a perceived loss of identity (as found in other studies exploring solitary-specific symptoms7915283032)
Finally consistent with previous studies1112
we found that the prevalence of psychiatric distress did not significantly increase over time for incarcerated people that either stay or are released from the IMU 1 year later Yet our qualitative data suggest that the BPRS may not be capturing actual psychopathology as re-spondents pointed to psychiatric distressmdashin profoundly existential terms as in the pre-viously mentioned quotations regarding selfhood and identitymdashbeyond the 2-week time period evaluated by the BPRS and outside the scope of the instrument More-over although symptoms were not cumula-tively found to worsen they did persist at high rates for incarcerated people in and out of the
IMU in 1-year follow-up assessments These latter findings are also consistent with other studies underscoring the need for additional research comparing incarcerated peoplersquos ex-periences across different contexts and over time17152832
Limitations Five specific limitations are especially
notable First although our initial sample was relatively large for a solitary confinement population our 1-year follow-up group especially the number of respondents remaining in solitary confinement in the second year was relatively small limiting our ability to establish statistically significant findings about change over time and across contexts from BPRS data Second as our interview results revealed the BPRS does not capture the full spectrum of psychiatric distress incarcerated people experience in solitary confinement Third assessments of psycho-logical well-being would ideally occur at multiple times beyond the 2 we were able to conduct within the constraints of this mul-timethod study Fourth Washington State is not representative of most state prison systems in terms of the prevalence of people with mental illnesses in solitary confinement as WADOC has undertaken reforms in both treatment of mental illness and imposition of solitary confinement over the past 20 years including reforms designed to divert people with serious mental illness to specialized treatment units33 Moreover these reforms have radically improved systematic mental health record-keeping we would expect not only a lower prevalence of psychiatric symp-toms and less deterioration in WADOC in IMUs but also a higher rate of documentation of those symptoms that are present Finally although people in solitary confinement may exhibit distinctive or disproportionately severe psychopathology causal inference regarding the relationship between solitary confinement and psychopathology is beyond the analysis we are able to perform here
Conclusions and Implications We found a wide range and high preva-
lence of symptoms of psychiatric distress in this population including BPRS symptoms associated with anxiety and depression among
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AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
as many as half of our participants adminis-trative indicators of SMI among at least one fifth of our participants and condition-specific symptoms such as feelings of extreme social isolation in well more than half of our participants Moreover these symptoms persisted in the second year for participants in and out of solitary confinement
If we study people in solitary confinement solely with instruments validated with non-incarcerated populations such as the BPRS we may fail to capture the extent of incare-cerated peoplersquos psychological distress A re-spondentrsquos rating on a given symptom may not be ldquohigh enoughrdquo symptoms may not be experienced within the instrumentrsquos desig-nated time frame or the discursive strategies incarcerated people use to articulate their suffering might not correspond with clinical language Moreover past research reveals that incarcerated people develop coping mecha-nisms for solitary1232 and these along with the fact that speaking openly about psycho-logical distress conflicts with institutional norms of self-protection in prison1230 likely contribute to a systematic underreporting of distress These are critical limitations of standardized assessments of incarcerated people whose symptoms may fluctuate sub-stantially in presence and severity during time in solitary1732 Apart from symptoms or their severity this fluctuation itself is an integral aspect of incarcerated peoplersquos psychological distress34 but a need for repeated measure-ment makes it especially difficult to capture
Our findings still point to the importance of using standardized instruments which provide a baseline for assessing and inter-preting the psychological effects of solitary confinement Nonetheless additional sources of evidencemdashinterviews clinician observa-tions staff observations medical filesmdashare crucial for capturing the range of symptoms that people in solitary exhibit and those symptomsrsquo prevalence duration and severity over time Without the benefit of mixed methods and improved instruments re-searchers and policymakers alike will con-tinue not only to lack desired data but also to not know what data we lack Increasing the transparency of both conditions of con-finement and the associated health effects is critical to both question formulation and data gathering
As 5 to 15 of the United Statesrsquo 16 million incarcerated people are held in solitary confinement for at least part of their incar-ceration56 and virtually all of those people will be released all members of society have a vested interest in limiting the induction of psychopathology suggested by findings such as those presented here At least some of the symptoms we described here including identity loss and hypersensitivity resulted directly from specific conditions of confine-ment such as the absence of mirrors and the repetitive slamming of doors To the extent that solitary is meant to make people more manageable its association with psychopa-thology calls into question its usefulness let alone its justice And to the extent that solitary confinement has any causative role in psychopathology our collective goal should be prevention
CONTRIBUTORS K Reiter served as principal investigator on this study led data collection and analysis and conceptualized and led the writing of this article J Ventura trained the study team in applying the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) consulted on data collection and analysis and participated in writing this article D Lovell consulted on study design and data collection led the analysis of administrative data and participated in writing this article D Augustine M Barragan K Chesnut P Dashtgard G Gonzalez N Pifer and J Strong participated in project design participant interviews data analysis and writing of this article K Chesnut also served as project manager and with P Dashtgard participated in administrative data and BPRS analysis T Blair consulted on data analysis and participated in writing this article
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Funding for this research was provided by the Langeloth Foundation
The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Alyssa Cisneros Emma Conner and Rosa Greenbaum contributed to study design interviewed participants and analyzed data for this project Leida Rojas Elena Amaya and Keely Blissmer helped to clean and organize data Rebecca Tublitz analyzed administrative data Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor Multiple anonymous reviewers provided detailed critical feedback that improved this piece significantly Finally the incarcerated people who shared their experiences with us made this study possible
Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
HUMAN PARTICIPANT PROTECTION This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
REFERENCES 1 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J Public Health 200595(10)1692ndash1695
2 Reiter K 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016
3 United Nations Solitary confinement should be banned in most cases UN expert says UN News Centre October 18 2011 Available at httpsnewsunorgen story201110392012-solitary-confinement-should-be-banned-most-cases-un-expert-says Accessed October 22 2019
4 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States Am J Public Health 2015105(1)18ndash26
5 Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program Yale Law School Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms Nov 2016 Available at https lawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterliman documentaimingtoreduceticpdf Accessed April 23 2019
6 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 Bureau of Justice Statistics 2015 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112 pdf Accessed April 23 2019
7 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary con-finement a systematic critique Crime Justice 201847(1) 365ndash416
8 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014104(3)442ndash447
9 Lovell D Patterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prison Crim Justice Behav 200835(8)985ndash1004
10 Morgan RD Smith P Labrecque RM et al Quantitative syntheses of the effects of administrative segregation on inmatesrsquo well-being Psychol Public Policy Law 201622(4)439ndash461
11 OrsquoKeefe ML Klebe KJ Metzner J Dvoskin J Fellner J Stucker A A longitudinal study of adminis-trative segregation J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 2013 41(1) 49ndash60
12 Walters GD Checking the math do restrictive housing and mental health need add up to psychologi-cal deterioration Crim Justice Behav 201845(9)1347ndash1362
13 Overall JE Gorham DR The brief psychiatric rating scale Psychol Rep 196210(3)799ndash812
14 Ventura J Nuechterlein KH Subotnik KL Gutkind D Gilbert EA Symptom dimensions in recent-onset schizophrenia and mania a principal components analysis of the 24-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Psychiatry Res 200097(2-3)129ndash135
15 Cloyes KG Lovell D Allen DG Rhodes LA Assessment of psychosocial impairment in super-maximum security unit sample Crim Justice Behav 200633(6)760ndash781
16 Hassan L Birmingham L Harty MA et al Prospective cohort study of mental health during imprisonment Br J Psychiatry 2011198(1)37ndash42
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S61
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
17 Senior J Birmingham L Harty MA et al Identifi-cation and management of prisoners with severe psy-chiatric illness by specialist mental health services Psychol Med 201343(7)1511ndash1520
18 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121 US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfcpus16pdf Accessed April 23 2019
19 Phipps P Gagliardi G Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and services interim report Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 Available at httpwwwwsippwagov ReportFile836Wsipp_Washingtons-Dangerous-Mentally-Ill-Offender-Law-Program-Selection-and-Services-Interim-Report_Full-Reportpdf Accessed April 23 2019
20 Neyfakh L What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate April 2015 Available at httpsslatecom news-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml Accessed April 23 2019
21 Berzofsky M Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recom-mendations US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017 Available at httpswwwbjsgov contentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf Accessed April 23 2019
22 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014
23 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism isolation and normalization in Danish prisons Punishm Soc 2017 20(1)92ndash112
24 Ventura J Lukoff D Nuechterlein KH Liberman RP Green MF Shaner A Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) expanded version (40) scales anchor points and administration manual Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 19933227ndash244
25 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples J Stud Alcohol Drugs 200970(5)751ndash761
26 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study re-tention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2016113(20)5477ndash5485
27 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
28 Haney C Mental health issues in long-term solitary and ldquosupermaxrdquo confinement Crime Delinq 200349(1) 124ndash156
29 James DJ Glaze LE Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates Washington DC Bureau of Justice Statistics 2006
30 Toch H Adams K Acting Out Maladaptation in Prisons Washington DC American Psychological Asso-ciation 2002
31 Reiter K Blair T Superlative subjects institutional futility and the limits of punishment Berkeley J Criminal Law 201823(2)162ndash193
32 Rhodes L Total Confinement Madness and Reason in a Maximum Security Prison Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004
33 Guy A Locked up and locked down segregation of inmates with mental illness 2015 Disability Rights Washington Available at httpswww disabilityrightswaorgwp-contentuploads201712 LockedUpandLockedDown_September2016pdf Accessed April 23 2019
34 Reiter K Koenig KA Extreme Punishment Compar-ative Studies in Detention Incarceration and Solitary Con-finement New York NY Palgrave MacMillan 2015
S62 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
Appendix A Additional Methods Details
Protecting Vulnerable Populations
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all
information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To recruit participants a research team member approached each
prisoner at his cell-front explained the study and invited him to interview Willing prisoners
were escorted singly to a confidential area (monitored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff)
consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research team
All identifiable data collected for this project including interview audio recordings
transcripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office or in a secure server space accessible only through multi-
factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data cleaning and linking
The University of California IRB approved this study as did the WADOC research department
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Training and Application
At the conclusion of each interview in both year one and year two interviewers
completed ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items For self-report questions interviewers asked
about the presence of symptoms in the previous two weeks per BPRS standard26 The research
team completed 16 hours of in-person structured symptom assessment training sessions with an
expert in BPRS research (co-author Ventura) prior to the year-one interviews and completed
four hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews for a total of 20 hours of
training26 Using a set of seven standardized BPRS training videos of patient interviews the
research team viewed and rated each video and discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold
Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for interrater reliability All research team
members met the minimum standard of an ICC=80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years 2017
and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment team
when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the standard
training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings
Coding Process
To develop our codebook six team members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-
line27 generating an initial list of over 500 codes These codes were further refined and
categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 10 code groups After a round of
pilot coding in which each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one re-
coding coding discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of
interest such as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months
to resolve discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were
calculated for intercoder agreement
WADOC Disclosures
The research presented here utilizes a confidential Data File from the Department of
Corrections (DOC) located within the Washington Department of Corrections The views
expressed here are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the DOC or
other Data File contributors Any errors are attributable to the author(s)
(4) STAFF EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Staff participated eagerly and thoughtfully in interviews and repeatedly expressed
gratitude for the opportunity to both have a voice in policy evaluations and reflect on the intensity of their work in the IMU
bull IMU Staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their
colleagues and with immediate supervisors nearly 90 percent of correctional officers
surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unitrdquo for instance
bull Although staff felt safe working in the IMU they overwhelmingly felt hypervigilant (often even unsafe) outside of prison suggesting that their work in the IMU had health
and social consequences outside of the IMU
bull Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them from
ldquoheadquartersrdquo they desired more opportunities for input into policymaking
especially around safety and security needs and risks
bull Staff described specific objections to reforms (1) prioritization of prisoner well-being
over staff well-being (2) violation of mandates to be fair and consistent through
individualized accommodations and treatment plans for prisoners and (3) imposition of
extra burdens on staff (especially around additional movement of prisoners into more
programs) causing stress about fulfilling obligations and anxieties about safety
(5) PRISONER EXPERIENCES IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food and care and
perceived staff as responsive to requests kites and grievances
bull Prisoners consistently expressed frustration with the long waitlists for classes and
programs waitlists which extended the durations of their IMU placements
bull Prisoners appreciated the good-faith efforts being made around programming in the
IMU but found many of the programs to be repetitive futile and not tailored to their
specific challenges and needs
bull Prisoners found social contact policies (who could visit) and practical barriers (phone
access and geographic distance) in the IMU frustrating and harmful to their well-being
6
bull Prisoners in the IMU frequently experienced clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety and guilt serious mental illness and self-harming behavior IMU-
induced symptoms of social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity
skin irritations and weight fluctuations un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
and musculoskeletal pain
bull Prisoners in the IMU were often just trying to make it through but upon release back
into the general prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and
physical challenges experienced while in the IMU
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
RESEARCH PRACTICES
bull Maintain long-standing commitment to systematically collecting robust data about
DOC policy and practice and collaboratively sharing and analyzing this data with
external independent researchers
PATTERNS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
bull Continue to carefully track all forms of restrictive housing use including number of
people confined rates of confinement average and cumulative lengths of stay and
the over-representation of Hispanic prisoners
bull Continue work to reduce overall restrictive housing populations but also the
frequency with which people experience these conditions lengths of stay in these
conditions and disparate impact of these conditions on Hispanic prisoners
bull The racial disproportionality in IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories and suggests an
area ripe for further policy attention
CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING
bull Continue work to mitigate the harms of restrictive housing including provision of
counseling healthcare group activities and programs and individualized
assessments of placement decisions
7
STAFF EXPERIENCES
bull Seek out and integrate IMU staff perspectives into reform initiatives
bull Provide regular opportunities for staff to reflect on the challenges of work in the
IMU (with supervisors counselors and researchers)
bull Develop resources to address the unique stress of being hypervigilant outside of the
IMU
PRISONER EXPERIENCES
bull Shorten wait times to participate in IMU programs
bull Leverage existing programming infrastructure (personnel classrooms) to develop
more substantively useful content for IMU prisoners
bull Continue to develop and support social contact for IMU prisoners
bull Address and mitigate the ongoing physical and mental harms associated with IMU
placements especially by reducing barriers to accessing healthcare and improving
the quality of treatment
COMMITMENT TO REFORM
bull Maintain the Mission Housing Administrator position which is focused on
implementing restrictive housing reform
bull Consider implementing similar ldquomission housingrdquo positions at the institutional level
to facilitate ongoing individualized attention to address the intersection of health
and behavioral challenges among the highest security prisoners in the most
restrictive conditions of confinement
bull Develop state-level agreements to permit transfer of seriously mentally ill prisoners
from custody-oriented facilities to healthcare-oriented facilities
8
INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT
The project at the broadest level sought to understand Washington Statersquos widely touted
reduction in solitary confinement use at both the level of quantitative administrative data and
at the level of lived experience for prisoners and staff The core claim in 2013 Washington had
reduced their solitary confinement population by more than half and implemented additional
reforms to shorten terms in segregation refocus on rehabilitation reframe responses to self-
harming prisoners and systematically intervene in prison-based violence through programs like
Operation Place Safety1 We started this project with two key questions
(1) What policies has Washington State implemented to reduce its reliance on restrictive
housing
(2) What are the impacts ndash on both prisoners and staff ndash of Washington statersquos restrictive
housing reduction program
To answer these questions we
bull Analyzed 15 years of administrative data six record sets of the entire DOC population
on evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and 2017)
including subject-level demographic records (N=57130) event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments
(12 million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million)
bull Administered paper surveys to prisoners on maximum custody status living in and staff
working in IMUs totaling 225 paper surveys collected from prisoners and 90 from
custody and non-custody staff
bull Conducted in-depth qualitative interviews (1) 106 interviews with a random sample of
maximum custody prisoners housed across all five of DOCrsquos IMUs in the summer of
2017 (2) 80 one-year follow-up interviews with 2017 participants still incarcerated in
the summer of 2018 (3) 77 interviews with a strategic convenience sample of custody
and non-custody staff working in and supervising IMUs in the summer of 2017
1 See Bernie Warner Dan Pacholke and Carly Kujath Operation Place Safety First Year in Review Jun 1 2014 (Washington State Department of Corrections) available online at httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
9
bull Collected DOC policies and reports about restrictive housing reform in the 2000s
conducted dozens of informal conversations with former DOC leadership to identify
policy changes and goals and observed multiple classification committee meetings
during visits to Washington state to administer surveys and conduct interviews
During both our survey administration and qualitative interview data collection phases we
worked with the Mission Housing Administrator to bring 8-9 research staff on site over multiple
days at each IMU in the state in 2017 and then at each prison housing year-one research
participants in 2018 At each institution staff worked with each other and the Mission Housing
Administrator to figure out how to move prisoners into secure interview rooms on and off
IMUs The cooperation was phenomenal and across hundreds of hours of interviews our
research staff uniformly felt comfortable and safe This project unprecedented in
While this report reviews in great detail preliminary scope and scale relied on findings from analyses of both interviews and Washington State DOCrsquos administrative data a broader implication of this partnership commitment to
extended partnership deserves acknowledging at the transparency and vision for reform
outset What Washington leadership at headquarters
and in the Research Department facilitated with this project is unprecedented in scope and
scale in prison research in the United States In facilitating this work Washington DOC has first
extended and amplified its reputation as a sought-after partner in research-practitioner
collaborations building on the collaborations between DOC and the University of Washington
in the late 1990s and early 2000s around mental health and solitary confinement And
Washington DOC has second proven that research like this is eminently possible The critical
insights here would not have been possible to discern without the bigger picture investments in
transparency and improvement to which Washington DOC is committed While prisoners staff
and administrative data itself point the way to possible policy recommendations to improve the
operation of Washington prisons these insights are all-the-more-important for other prison
systems which provide less room for analytic insights but offer more room for improvement
METHODS
This study sought to systematically evaluate Washington DOCrsquos use of long-term isolation over
time through rigorous application of mixed methods Comprehensive research studies about
restrictive housing use over more than a few years in any given state are rare and analyses
incorporating qualitative interviews with prisoners and staff are rarer still Only a few studies
exist of specific ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities one of these conducted in the Washington DOC was
10
completed more than 10 years ago2 A few additional studies have sought to analyze statistics
about durations of confinement racial impacts of isolation violence in isolation and recidivism
rates post-release from isolation in several different states3 This study then breaks new
ground for researchers and policymakers alike For this reason we share here a detailed
description of our methods in hopes that this research will serve as a model for both future
studies and ongoing researcher-practitioner collaborations
QUANTITATIVE DATA COMPILATION
At the center of our quantitative data analysis is a longitudinal administrative record set of the
entire DOC population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011
2014 and 2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of
admissions and releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12
million) infractions (630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) The scale and scope of
this data permitted our research team to independently develop measures of critical
independent variables like criminal history as well as of key dependent variables of interest
like rates of restrictive housing use Specifically this data set included the entire prison
conviction history for all 57000 prisoners in subject population permitting our research team
to independently identify the most serious current offense and to provide a consistent measure
of prisonersrsquo criminal histories in our analyses And this data set included not just prisoners in
some form of restrictive housing but the entire prison
population on each given snapshot date allowing us to
independently define and operationalize restrictive
housing use
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying
uniform coding procedures to compile event-level data
Quantitative Data bull 15 years 6 snapshot
intervals 2002-2017 bull 57130 subject-level records bull 24 million inter-facility
movements
2 Lorna Rhodes Total Confinement Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004) Sharon Shalev Supermax Controlling risk through solitary confinement (Portland OR Willan Publishing 2009) Keramet Reiter 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016)
3 See eg CS Briggs JL Sundt and TC Castellano ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 (2003) 1341-1376 David Lovell Kristin Cloyes David G Allen amp Lorna A Rhodes ldquoWho Lives in Supermaximum Custody A Washington State Studyrdquo Federal Probation Vol 642 (Dec 2000) 33-38 Daniel P Mears amp William D Bales ldquoSupermax Incarceration and Recidivismrdquo Criminology Vol 474 (2009) 1131-65 Keramet Reiter ldquoParole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007rdquo Punishment amp Society Vol 145 530-63 (Dec 2012)
11
into a subject-level dataset We computed the housing location and custody status of every
prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at each location and
subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as infractions
Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and plausible counts
and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all prisoners in six
snapshot cohorts We also used inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-tests) to test for
differences across cohorts and groups
We measured restrictive housing use by examining the intersection of custody status and
location identifying all prisoners assigned to maximum custody status (the highest level of
custody classification in DOC) all prisoners housed in Intensive Management Units (the most
secure housing units in DOC) and focusing in particular on individuals at the intersection of
this status and location Appendix A includes a matrix detailing more specifically how we
operationalized and measured restrictive housing use in DOC In a meeting with Research
Department Staff on December 7 2020 we confirmed this operationalization was consistent
with how DOC research staff are measuring restrictive housing use in DOC currently
Our operationalization of restrictive housing potentially undercounts one category of individual
in restrictive housing those who are neither assigned a maximum custody status nor housed in
an IMU but are nonetheless in some form of segregation (likely administrative or disciplinary)
Our analysis of prisonersrsquo confinement status used movement records to distinguish periods in
IMU from time spent either in other specialized facilities or in the general prison population
(ldquogeneral populationrdquo) but excluded within facility movements from one bed or cell to another
(likely 50 million in number for our subjects) A prisoner placed in segregation prior to transfer
to an IMU or assignment of maximum custody status would not be captured in our counts
Since 2015 the Research Department has had a flag in OMNI for ldquoad seg statusrdquo which allows
them to better capture this population that we do not observe this flag was not present in the
data obtained from DOC and no such flag exists for the pre-2015 data we analyze
In order to better account for the variation in both restrictive housing capacity and
characteristics over the entire fifteen years of our data set we worked closely with Kevin
Walker and Tim Thrasher to identify both (1) IMU capacity and (2) restrictive housing capacity
within non-IMU facilities over the entire 15-year-period of our study Appendix B includes a
table with our estimates of these capacities
We also systematically collected and categorized restrictive-housing oriented policy reforms
and reports between 2011 and 2017 peak periods of reform and focus of this study
12
SURVEY DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
Survey Data bull 225 prisoner surveys
(response rate 62) bull 90 staff surveys
(response rate na)
Prisoner surveys included 36 numbered questions Each contained a combination of yesno
ordinal bubble options and short answer sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to
explain or elaborate on their answers Topics included experiences in IMUs conditions of
confinement health and well-being and demographic background many questions were
drawn from existing studies on prisons and prisoner
experiences4 In all there were 89 substantive items on the
survey (excluding demographic questions) coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU)
ordinal (eg daily weekly monthly describing frequency of
interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) variables
Staff surveys included 70 numbered questions Most questions were yesno or multiple choice
but there were also some open-ended probing questions Topics included corrections
employment history job responsibilities experience working in the IMU beliefs regarding
restrictive housing attitudes towards coworkers and supervisors opinions regarding restrictive
housing reforms feelings of safety health and well-being and demographic information Many
questions were drawn from existing studies with correctional staff5
Between February and April 2017 PI Reiter and Project Manager Chesnut conducted two
separate trips to collect survey data from prisoners and staff across all five of the IMUs in DOC
Surveys were piloted at MCC in February 2017 to allow for slight revisions of any confusing text
in the instrument Surveys were distributed to prisoners and staff in IMUs at the remaining four
facilities (CBCC SCCC WCC and WSP) at the end of March and beginning of April 2017 At each
site Reiter and Chesnut first spoke individually to each maximum custody status IMU prisoner
at cell-front accompanied by Mission Housing Administrator Thrasher We explained survey
participation was optional and that all data would be anonymized and answered any questions
about the research project For security reasons only paper-and-pen surveys were offered to
4 For studies from which relevant questions were drawn see Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates (Santa Monica CA The Rand Corporation 1982 Report No N-1635-NIJ) Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic (Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014) Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J ldquoTheoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation and normalization in Danish prisonsrdquo Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
5 See eg J Sundt ldquoThe Effect of Administrative Segregation on Prison Order and Organizational Culturerdquo in Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and Future Directions NCJ 250323 (Washington DC US Department of Justice National Institute of Justice 2016)
13
the maximum custody prisoner population surveys were distributed first thing in the morning
and collected a few hours later by Reiter and Chesnut We also provided stamped self-
addressed envelopes upon request for those participants who wanted additional time In total
we distributed surveys to all 363 prisoners on maximum custody status in the IMU in spring of
2017 prisoners returned 225 surveys for a response rate of 62
Following survey distribution to the prisoners we held an informal question-and-answer
session with custody staff on the unit to introduce ourselves and the research project Staff
like prisoners were informed that the survey was optional anonymized and only aggregated
results would be shared with DOC We then distributed paper surveys to custody and non-
custody staff working in each IMU We encouraged staff to return the surveys to us before we
left each facility but we also provided staff with self-addressed stamped envelopes upon
request For staff we also shared digital copies of the survey through e-mail following each site
visit We also made a special effort to seek out non-custody staff working in the IMU such as
medical staff mental health workers classification counselors and program facilitators In
order to be as inclusive as possible we repeated this process again in the afternoon following
shift change and left copies of the surveys with self-addressed stamped envelopes for the
graveyard shift In all staff returned 90 surveys Calculating a response rate for this strategic
convenience sample is not possible because we sought to reach staff across all three shifts
included non-custody staff like nurses and educators who sometimes work across units and
distributed surveys in person and via e-mail
The surveys served a dual purpose in the research project First they provided a baseline
understanding of the challenges of living and working in Washington IMUs as well as of the
attitudes towards recent reforms which was critical to the research team as we developed
interview instruments and conducted interviews Second they gave the research team an
opportunity to introduce the research project to prisoners and staff laying the groundwork for
interview participation in subsequent months
INTERVIEW DESIGN amp ADMINISTRATION
The qualitative prisoner interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured
questions Questions included a combination of yesno options and probing open-ended
follow-ups Topics included conditions of daily life (prior to and during isolation) perceived
state of physical and mental health access to medical treatment and experiences with
required programming in the IMU Where possible included questions replicated those asked
in existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences Fourteen of the questions making up
the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) a standardized scale used to identify indicators of
serious mental illness were embedded within the interview instrument In total 40 of the
14
substantive items on the interview instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 14
embedded questions designed to establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded
quantitatively as cardinal (eg How much does it cost Interview Instruments to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have bull Questions about conditions you noticed any changes in your health since you health programming reforms have been in this IMU) variables Such questions demographics always included open-ended follow-up questions bull Embedded Brief Psychiatric (eg Can you describe those changes) We first used Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment the interview instrument at the smallest IMU in for prisoners Washington interviewing 15 prisoners We then
revised both the wording and ordering of questions for maximum clarity and engagement in the
remaining 91 interviews we conducted across the four other IMUs in the state
The condensed year-two instrument contained approximately 70 questions The questions
largely replicated the year-one questions ndash but excluded the questions about background
demographic and experiences over time in prison and adjusted some other questions to
address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status As part of both initial and
follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psychological assessment both
during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following (for the 10 observational
items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech) interviews For the 14 self-
report questions embedded in the interview guide interviewers asked about the presence of
symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard Importantly this means that BPRS scores
certainly undercount symptoms experienced intermittently or outside of that two-week time
window
The qualitative staff interview instrument consisted of 87 numbered semi-structured questions
As with the prisoner interview instrument these questions included a combination of yesno
questions and probing open-ended follow-up questions Topics included IMU policies job
responsibilities personal safety health relationships with coworkers and supervisors
restrictive housing reforms and demographic information
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and to develop the interview
instruments Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol
for administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment
training sessions in year one with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Ventura and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Using a set of seven standardized
BPRS training videos of patient interviews the research team viewed and rated each video and
15
discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for
interrater reliability Dr Ventura conducted an interrater reliability analysis and confirmed that
trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years
2017 and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment
team when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the
standard training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings In addition to
ensure appropriate administration of the BPRS in a prison setting Dr Ventura accompanied the
research team on the first leg of the first visit to MCC in year one Dr Ventura co-conducted
interviews with several team members and was available to clarify questions throughout the
length of the trip In sum this extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members
over the two years (9 women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral
students (9) with expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement
settings identified and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being
studied and minimized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application
of questions and assessments
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that
all information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To identify potential participants the Mission Housing Administrator
provided a list of all prisoners on maximum custody status at a given IMU a day or two prior to
the research teamrsquos visit to that IMU Chesnut then randomized that list of prisoners in order
to identify a list and order of potential research participants (with the target goal of
interviewing roughly one-third of maximum custody status prisoners in each IMU) To recruit
participants a research team member approached potential participants at cell-front
explained the study and noted whether the prisoner would be interested in participating
Willing prisoners were escorted one-by-one to a confidential area (monitored visually but not
aurally by DOC staff) consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research
team In all 106 prisoners participated in interviews 39 percent of the prisoners approached
for participation refused comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people6 Interviews
ranged in length from 45 minutes to 3 hours
6 D Lovell ldquoPatterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prisonrdquo Criminal Justice amp Behavior Vol 358 985ndash1004 (2008) M Berzofsky amp S Zimmer National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recommendations
16
Immediately following year-one interviews interviewers asked participants whether they
consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to participating in one-year
follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all but two (n = 104)
consented in writing to medical file reviews At Interviews Completed the conclusion of each prisoner interview in both bull Random sample of prisoners year year one and year two interviewers completed one 106 ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items Following bull Follow-up prisoner interviews interviews interviewers reviewed consenting year two 80 participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of bull Strategic convenience sample of diagnoses prescriptions and substance abuse staff year one 77 status DOC additionally provided electronic
administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as
comparable population-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
In year two the UCI research team attempted to re-interview all of the year-one participants
who were still incarcerated within Washington DOC In total we conducted 80 re-interviews
Only 4 participants refused re-interviews 1 died and 21 were unavailable because of
institutional transfers or being on parole This drop-out rate is low compared to similar studies7
In year two 28 participants were in the IMU and 52 were back in the general prison
population These year-two follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and two hours
During the research teamrsquos return visits to each IMU in the state in year two the team made
presentations to IMU staff about the research findings from year one including the results of
the year-one staff interviews Unlike prisoners staff were not randomly selected for interviews
during year one Rather a strategic convenience sample of custody and non-custody staff was
identified Efforts were made to interview custody staff from all three shifts non-custody staff
(medical and programming) and supervisory staff at all five facilities Staff at each facility were
informed ahead of time about scheduled interview trips and encouraged by DOC administrative
leadership to participate if they felt comfortable Once on site at each facility UCI team
(US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018) httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf
7 JH Kleschinsky LB Bosworth SE Nelson EK Walsh HJ Shaffer ldquoPersistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samplesrdquo J Stud Alcohol Drugs Vol 705751ndash761 (2009) B Western A Braga D Hureau C Sirois ldquoStudy retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach populationrdquo Proc Natl Acad Sci USA Vol 11320 5477ndash5485 (2016)
17
members directly approached staff (usually in the afternoon or on the second day of interviews
on site after the work of identifying and moving prisoners into interview rooms was underway)
to identify willing interview participants Staff were informed participation was voluntary and
would not involve incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them
adversely and that all information shared would be protected and anonymized In all 77 staff
from across all five IMUs and headquarters participated in interviews Staff included
correctional officers supervisors mental and medical health practitioners program and
educational instructors and institutional and headquarters leadership Since staff were
strategically sampled and many staff interviewed worked both in the IMU and in other units
within the prison a refusal rate cannot readily be calculated for the staff interviews Staff
interviews lasted between 30 minutes and 3 hours
All interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed
translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details
(names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti for analysis (as discussed further below) All
identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings transcripts
BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a locked
filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible only
through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data
cleaning and linking The University of California IRB approved this study as did the Washington
DOC research department
QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS
To develop a codebook for analyzing these hundreds of hours of interview data six team
members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-line inductively exploring how participants
understood restrictive housing generating an initial list of over 500 codes8 These codes were
further refined and categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 9 thematic
code groups IMU Relations Use of Force Safety Health IMU Culture IMU Policy IMU
Conditions Enduring the IMU and Prison Work Issues After a round of pilot coding in which
each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one recoding coding
discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of interest such
as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months to resolve
8 K Charmaz Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis (Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006) Y Chun Tie M Birks K Francis ldquoGrounded theory research A design framework for novice researchersrdquo SAGE open medicine 7 1-8 (2019)
18
discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were calculated
for intercoder agreement
BPRS data were imported into SPSS and Stata to generate descriptive statistics including the
comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS items and factors among three groups of
prisoner interview participants year-one participants year-two participants housed in the IMU
and year-two participants housed in the general population Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos
test were performed to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing
location time raceethnicity and gang status
FINDINGS
We collected a large amount of robustly detailed data for this project and are still in the process
of analyzing and synthesizing across the administrative data surveys and interview transcripts
To date the UCI research team has published three peer-reviewed articles based on this
research two drawing primarily on the prisoner
interviews in leading public health journals the Initial Publications American Journal of Public Health and PLOS One 1 Reiter et al American Journal of
Public Health (2020) and one drawing primarily on DOC administrative 2 Strong et al PLOS One (2020) data in a leading criminology journal Justice 3 Lovell et al Justice Quarterly (2020) Quarterly All three articles are included as
appendices to this report In addition to
summarizing findings from those articles here we include as-yet unpublished findings from our
analyses of administrative data and our surveys and interviews with prisoners and staff We
present three categories of findings (1) patterns and conditions in restrictive housing use (2)
impacts on staff and (3) impacts on prisoners
PATTERNS amp CONDITIONS IN RESTRICTIVE HOUSING USE
Over the 2010s DOC implemented an array of reforms in pursuit of three goals we focus on
analyzing here First DOC sought to reduce the number of people in restrictive housing
Second DOC sought to reduce the length of time individuals spend in restrictive housing Third
DOC sought to mitigate the harms of the harsh conditions of restrictive housing Our analysis
indeed finds improvements in each of these three areas of focus though we also identify
fluctuations in the degree of improvement barriers and challenges to implementing these
improvements and additional areas that might deserve to be the focus of additional reforms
We focus in this section primarily on our analysis of administrative data the six cohorts of
snapshot data at three-year-intervals between 2002 and 2017 along with restrictive-housing
oriented policy reforms and reports we collected as part of our analysis We concentrate
19
particularly on maximum custody status in the IMU the central focus of our study However
where relevant we also present findings on other population in the IMU As we detail in our
2020 Justice Quarterly article (Appendix C) where we published some of the initial findings
presented here a range of custody statuses and housing locations are highly relevant to
understanding overall restrictive housing use For instance those on maximum custody status
outside of an IMU and those not on maximum custody status in an IMU both experience
restrictive housing conditions and also reflect the range of behavioral challenges and security
threats DOC is managing at any given time
FLUCTUATIONS IN POPULATIONS AND LENGTHS OF STAY IN IMUS
Overall the maximum custody population in IMUs in Washington state was lower in 2017 (342
prisoners) than at its peak in 2011 (472 prisoners) However over the entire period of our
quantitative data analysis there were many fluctuations in this population from a low of 149
prisoners in 2002 to another dip to 283 prisoners in 2014 Figure 1 presents the number of
prisoners in IMUs by custody status from 2002 to 2017 These numbers suggest that the widely
touted reductions in the DOC maximum custody IMU population which inspired this study
were not sustained over the course of the study Those in IMU who were not on maximum
custody statusmdashlargely those held on administrative or disciplinary segregationmdashsaw similar
variation in population over time peaking in 2008 and falling somewhat in subsequent years
Figure 1 Prisoners in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
800
700
s r 600
en 177
osi 500 337
r 260
Pf 291
o 400
r e 300
mb 144
Nu 472
200 105 338 342
283 100 228
149
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
As a proportion of the total prison population those held in IMUs peaked in 2008 when 39
percent of the prison population was housed in an IMU That proportion was substantially
20
similar in 2011 before dropping slightly in 2014 and 2017 Figure 2 presents the percentage of
the total prison population held in IMU by custody status
Figure 2 Percentage of Total Prison Population in IMU by Custody Status 2002-2017
3 27
20
09
14
16
09
19
10
17141
2
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n 19
07
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
Ave
rage
Day
s in
IMU
Reductions in the average length of stay (LOS) for prisoners on maximum custody status in the
IMU were more sustained than the 2014 population reductions Figure 3 presents the average
number of days in the IMU by custody status For those on maximum custody status in the IMU
on the 2017 snapshot date the average LOS in the IMU was 214 days lower than even in 2002
(average LOS 227 days) and a dramatic decrease from the 2011 peak average LOS of nearly
348 days This represents a reduction in average lengths of IMU stays of more than four months
ndash an impressive policy intervention Similarly the average LOS in IMU for those held in IMUs but
not on maximum custody status on the snapshot date (likely those on administrative or
disciplinary segregation) saw a sustained decrease across the study period from an average of
114 days in 2002 to 71 days in 2017
Figure 3 Average Length of Stay in IMU (Days) by Custody Status and Confinement Location 2002-2017
348 326
214
128117115 91
7166
306 284
227
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
IMU Maximum Custody IMU AdminstrativeDisciplinary Segregation
21
These reductions in the average IMU LOS however is only one measure of how much time
prisoners are spending in IMUs Another measure of time-in-the-IMU is cumulative over a
prisonerrsquos entire sentence how much time Figure 4 Average Cumulative Days Spent in IMU by All Prisoners 2002-2017 will he spend in an IMU setting9 Across the
entire Washington prison population 90 cumulative time spent in an IMU has 80 increased steadily from an average of 43
Cum
ulat
ive
Day
s in
IMU
in IMU declined in recent years for the maximum custody population a greater share of the
incarcerated population experienced placement in an IMU
This analysis suggests two critical areas of focus Figure 5 Percentage of All Prisoners Spending at Least One Day in an IMU 2002-2017 IMU reform First reductions in IMU
populations and lengths of stay must be 3433tracked over time to analyze whether they are
sustained Second rates of IMU use represent
o
f Pri
son
Popu
altio
n
another critical measure in assessing IMU
reform in addition to populations and lengths
of stay In our 2020 Justice Quarterly article we
hypothesize that IMU capacity is closely tied to
IMU use noting that IMU populations increase
with increasing bed capacity and decrease with
decreasing bed capacity this hypothesis
requires further analysis and deserves further
policy attention
24 25 28
30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
days in 2002 to almost double that at 82
days on average in 2017 (see Figure 4)
Indeed a greater proportion of people in
DOC experienced IMU confinement over
time In 2002 24 of the prison population
had spent at least one day in an IMU By
2017 over one-third (34) of the prison
population had spent time in an IMU (Figure
5) In short while the average length of stay
9 For each snapshot year cumulative length of stay in IMU is measured from the beginning of each prisonerrsquos current sentence up until the snapshot date
22
In sum the 2014 reductions in maximum custody IMU populations in Washington have not been sustained Average lengths of stay in IMU for the maximum custody population have steadily decreased since 2011 but more prisoners in Washington DOC experience IMU
confinement each year Decreasing IMU capacity and reducing lengths of stay are both key to
sustaining decreases in IMU populations
RACIAL DISPROPORTIONALITIES
While Washington DOC had some successes in reducing IMU use especially in reducing average
lengths of stay the racially disproportionate impact of the IMU has increased dramatically since
2002 The racial disproportion of the IMU actually peaked in 2014 when the IMU population
had recently declined Figure 6 presents the racialethnic makeup of the IMU maximum custody
and general prison populations In 2014 37 percent of
maximum custody IMU prisoners were Hispanic as
compared to only 12 percent of the general prison
population As the maximum custody IMU population
increased this racial disproportionality decreased
slightly in 2017 27 percent of maximum custody IMU
prisoners were Hispanic as compared to only 13 percent of the general prison population
Figure 7 presents the racialethnic disproportionality of the IMU maximum custody population
relative to the general prison population Hispanic gang members were similarly over-
represented in the maximum custody IMU population in these years (see Figure 8)
This racial disproportionality in maximum custody IMU placements raises questions about the
relationship between race gangs and prison behavioral histories (especially infraction rates)
and suggests an area ripe for further policy attention We look forward to conducting further
analyses of the administrative data to better understand how these various predictors of
maximum custody status IMU classifications interact over time
Between 2005 and 2017 Hispanic prisoners were 2-3 times as likely to be in the IMU as in the general prison population
23
Figure 4 Racial and Ethnic Make-Up IMU Maximum Custody and General Prison Population 2002-2017
White Non-Hispanic LatinoHispanic
70 70
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population General Population IMU-Max IMU-Max
Black Non-Hispanic Other Non-Hispanic
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
30 30
2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max General Population IMU-Max
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
10
20
0
10
20
24
-
Figure 5 RacialEthnic Disproportionality in the IMU Maximum Custody Population 2002-2017 D
ispro
port
iona
lity
Ratio
35
30
25
20
15
10
05
00 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
White Non-Hispanic Black Non-Hispanic OtherUnknown Hispanic
How to read this chart
Disproportionality ratios (DR) greater than one reflect disproportionate representation in the IMU Maximum Custody population relative to the general population
DR equal to one reflects equal representation in IMU Maximum Custody and general population groups
DR lower than one reflects an under representation of the racialethnic group
25
BEHAVIORAL PROFILES GANG AFFILIATION AND SERIOUS INFRACTIONS
While our analysis demonstrates that racial disproportionality steadily increased among maximum custody IMU prisoners over the study period especially relative to the general prison population overall behavioral profiles among both general population and maximum custody IMU prisoners fluctuated over the study period
First in the general population the overall proportion of prisoners identified as gang affiliated increased only slightly over the study period from 19 percent to 24 percent of all prisoners While the overall proportion of gang-affiliated prisoners in the IMU was about 3 times higher this proportion also increased only slightly over the study period from 60 percent to 67 percent of all maximum custody IMU prisoners In the general population white- and black-affiliated gang members remained relatively stable over the study period (4-5 percent of the population and 9-10 percent of the population respectively) In the maximum-custody IMU population white- and black-affiliated gang membership fluctuated somewhat across the snapshot years while Hispanic-affiliated gang membership increased substantially from 21 percent in 2002 to 32 percent in 2017 Relative to their share of general population Hispanic-affiliated gang members were consistently over-represented in the maximum-custody IMU population making up nearly 40 percent of the population in both 2008 and 2014 Figure 8 displays this fluctuating over-representation of Hispanic-affiliated gang members while Figure 9 displays the racial breakdown of gang-affiliates in the maximum custody IMU population
Figure 6 Affiliation with HispanicLatino Gangs in IMU
Maximum Custody and General Populations
Between 2002 and 2017 Hispanic-affiliated gang membership in the general prison population doubled from 4 percent to 8 percent and in the maximum custody IMU population doubled from 21 percent to a peak of 40 percent in 2014
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
General Population IMU-Max
26
Figure 7 Gang Affiliation in the IMU Maximum Custody Population by Type of Gang
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Hispanic-Affiliated Black-Affiliated White-Affiliated Other Gang
Second in the general population overall annual infraction rates decreased slightly over the study period (from an average of 13 infractions per year in 2002 to an average of 11 in 2017) Figure 10 displays average annual overall infraction rates as well as counts of violent assaults and staff assaults for the maximum custody IMU and general prison populations Average numbers of violent infraction and staff assaults remained low and stable at an average of 05 violent infractions per year and 01 staff assaults per
Annual infraction rates and counts year in the general population Between 2005 and of both violent and staff
2017 infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU infractions were fairly stable over population were fairly stable However overall time in both the general prison infraction rates in the maximum custody IMU population and the maximum population were about 5-6 times higher than in the custody IMU population from 2005 general prison population Following a peak of 83 in 2002 the mean annual infraction rate for the maximum custody IMU population fluctuated between 4 and 5 infractions per year while the average number of violent infractions hovered around 3 and the average number of staff assaults hovered just under one The relative stability of serious misconduct in both the general and the maximum custody IMU populations (as compared to the instability of the IMU population over this period) raise questions about whether and how infractions are related to maximum custody IMU placements ndash questions we look forward to addressing in future analyses
27
Figure 8 In-Prison Violations IMU Maximum Cu stody and General Population 2002-2017
IMU Maximum Custody General Population
9 9
8 8
s n 7 7
oitca 6 6
rfnI f 5 5
o e ta 4 4
Rtn 3 3
uC
o
2 2
1 1
0 0 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Annual Infraction Rate Annual Infraction Rate Violent Infractions (Count) Violent Infractions (Count) Staff Assaults (Count) Staff Assaults (Count)
EXISTING POLICY REFORM SUPPORTS FURTHER RESTRICTIVE HOUSING REDUCTIONS
Over the 2010s Washington DOC enacted an impressively wide range of reforms in order to achieve the reductions in IMU populations and lengths of stay described above These reforms also sought to mitigate the harshness of the conditions in IMUs or restrictive housing Table 1 below provides our summary of the reforms we learned about in conversations with DOC leadership staff and prisoners as well as through searches of policy documents archived on the DOC website These reforms included (a) institutionally-oriented reforms like altering conditions of confinement especially through providing new programming opportunities for prisoners in the IMU (b) organizational restructuring designed to facilitate delivering these new programs and (c) individually-focused reforms to support behavioral modification better mental health care and alternatives to IMU placements Dan Pacholke who was the Secretary of Corrections during the early planning stages of this project co-authored a 2015 report More
28
Than Emptying Beds which describes many of these reforms in more detail centralize decision-making implement programming in segregation and support staff10
Our interviews with prisoners and staff confirmed that these reforms were making a difference day-to-day in terms of the overall operation and individual experience of living and working in the IMUs Specifically staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
Table 1 Categories and Types of Washington DOC Restrictive Housing Reform as identified in 2017
Conditions of Confinement
Organizational Restructuring
Behavior Modification
Mental Health Preventative
Congregate Programming
Creation of a Mission Housing Administrator
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (in-cell)
Elimination of self-harm infractions
Alternative sanctions
Level System Mission-Based Housing Units
amp Teams
Individual Behavior Management
Program (IBMP)
Disruptive Hygiene Protocol
Alternative Specialized
Housing Units (TRU WRU)
Increased Elective access to
programming (GED
Redemption
Facility Risk Management
Teams
Chemical dependency class
counselors MH staff
(attending to
Operation Place Safety (2013-14)
Book Club) prisoner-staff ratios)
Nature Immersion
(Blue) Room
Indeterminate sentencing
TransitionStep-down Unit
From staff we consistently heard that there was less day-to-day violence and more person-to-person humanity than in the early 2000s Staff described how prior to recent reforms in the IMUs cell extractions were common ldquoIt was completely rocking and rollingrdquo was a phrase we heard repeatedly But by 2017 cell extractions and other violent prisoner-staff encounters were rare One staff member we interviewed mourned the change acknowledging ldquoI really enjoyed cell extractionsrdquo but he also said he knew the culture change represented an improvement in everyonersquos well-being ldquoIs it actually good for everyone to do that stuff you know what I mean No The answer is nordquo This acceptance of non-violent de-escalation as the
10 Dan Pacholke amp Sandy Mullins More Than Emptying Beds A Systems Approach to Segregation Reform (Washington DC Bureau of Justice Assistance 2015) No NCJ249858 httpsbjaojpgovsitesgfilesxyckuh186filespublicationsMorethanEmptyingBedspdf
29
status quo was especially noticeable in comparison with data Lorna Rhodes and David Lovell collected 20 years ago Prisoners also agreed that cell extractions were rare as one noted ldquoWere not doing a lot of cell-extractions here I havent seen a cell-extraction since Ive been here So compared to the California system and the Federal system ndash I was teamed [extracted
from my cell] just to give me fluidsrdquo Our pre-interview Staff and prisoners described the IMUs as largely feeling safe and also providing at least some access to critical resources like healthcare
surveys confirmed these qualitative descriptions a majority of staff (just over 60 percent of respondents) reported they ldquodid not feel unsaferdquo working in the IMU and even more prisoners (75 percent of respondents) reported that they had never felt unsafe in the IMU
From prisoners we consistently heard that they had access to counselors mental health care and a diversity of other programs Although prisoners frequently expressed concerns about the quality and frequency of healthcare they received they also consistently reported that they were able to access at least some care filing and receiving responses to medical kites seeing medical staff regularly and getting adequate care for major illnesses and terminal diseases like cancer For instance in our pre-interview surveys more than 50 percent of prisoners reported seeing medical staff daily One prisonerrsquos comments were representative ldquoI do trust the mental health staff yes I just believe that they should do morerdquo But another said he appreciated the level of care in his current IMU ldquoI would say that this one addresses certain mental health issues better than others you know Theyrsquore more quick to deal with the mental health here with more one-on-onerdquo
Overall in our interviews with prisoners and staff as well as in our observations of custody classification committee meetings we saw that those prisoners remaining on maximum custody status in the IMU for extended periods
bull Prisoners are in the IMU for had well-documented histories of severe
specific identifiable reasons behavioral issues We interviewed prisoners who
bull Prisoners receive regular had repeatedly attacked staff prisoners who had individualized assessments regarding repeatedly harmed themselves through actions their continued IMU placement like head banging and swallowing sharp objects bull Treatment and custody staff work and prisoners who had been in the IMU so long together to develop targeted they did not want to return to the general prison interventions with the goal of population In observations in IMUs and at transitioning even the most headquarters we witnessed compassionate behaviorally challenging and risky custody and treatment staff grappling with how to individuals out of the IMU design individualized plans to address and overcome these behavioral challenges ndash from weekly check-ins with headquarters leadership to the provision of tailored incentives for exercise equipment and art supplies In particular the
30
Mission Housing Administrator is familiar with every individual in the IMU regularly assessing and documenting justifications for their placem ent institutionalizing such individual-level knowledge and attention is critical to maintenance of existing progress and continued reform
In sum prisoners are in the IMU for specific identifiable reasons prisoners receive regular individualized assessments regarding their continued IMU placement by a classification committee and treatment and custody staff work together to develop targeted interventions with the goal of transi tioning e ven the most behavioral ly chall enging and risk y i ndividuals out of the IMU This is in stark contrast to other systems like California where hundreds of prisoners have spent years in restrictive housing with little or no evidence of unresolved or severe behavioral issues justifying their continued maintenance in highly restrictive conditions
Still administrative data suggests that Washington DOC rsquos 2014 IMU population reductions have not been sustained that an increasing proportion of people in DOC experience IMU
confinement over the study period and that Washington DOC is a leader among state this confinement has a racially correctional systems in restrictive housing disproportionate impact Moreover as we reform administrative leaders have built a detail below prisoners and staff raised a solid foundation for continued reforms ndash number of concerns with both IMU conditions including IMU population reductions and reforms decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions Nonetheless Washington DOC has laid a solid
foundation for continued reforms ndash including IMU population reductions decreases in IMU sentences and improvements in conditions ndash with the policy changes they have implemented over the last five years especially Both individual- and institution-level reforms have enabled the successes DOC has achieved to date Indeed these reforms demonstrate that Washington is a leader among state correctional systems in seeking to understand how prisoners end up in restrictive housing for extended periods designing programs to change IMU -stay trajectories and implementing alternati ve pathways that shift patterns of restrictive housing placements across institutions
IMPACTS ON STAFF
In this section we focus on our analysis of (1) the 90 surveys we collected from staff working in IMUs and (2) the 77 interviews we conducted with sta ff working in or supervising Among the 90 staff completing sur veys 74 per cent were mal e 66 pe rcent were married 84 perce nt were white and their average age was 44 Among the 77 staff completing interviews 74 percent were male 57 percent were marrie d 84 percent were white and their average age was 42
31
Because we do not have overall demographics of staff in W ashington DOC we cannot compare the demographics of our interview participants to the overall demographics of DOC staff
We highl ight four the mes from our surveys of and interviews with staff Each theme suggests areas where DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU staff as well as areas where DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to staff well- being positive aspects of IMU staff culture negative effects of working in the IMU on staff staff desire for input into IMU policies and procedures and specific staff objections to IMU reforms
APPRECIATION FOR IMU STAFF CULTURE
IMU staff repeatedly described comradery trust and professionalism among their colleagues and with immediate supervisors ndash both in the ir sur vey response s and duri ng i nterviews Nearly 90 percent of correctional officers surveyed said ldquoI feel very loyal to this unit rdquo for instance On average staff described being satisfied with their
IMU staff largely like their jobs trust jobs 75 percent said they were mostly or very
their colleagues and immediate satisfied and 64 percent said they would take the supervisors and feel safe at work same job again Likewise 75 percent reported that This satisfaction and professionalism their immediate supervisors frequently asked for can and should be leveraged in their opinions about problems (describing t he implementing IMU reforms frequency as either ldquosometimesrdquo or ldquoalwaysrdquo) And two-thirds of staff (67 percent) reported feeling safe working in the IMU
In our informal conversations and formal interviews with staff we repeatedly observed and heard staff expressing trust and appreciation for their colleagues in the IMU In some cases our presence required additional staffing on the units and many ldquoregularrdquo IMU staff noted how working with staff unfamiliar with IMU routines and relationships was disruptive in contrast to their usual trusting relationship with their ldquoregularrdquo IMU colleagues One staff member rsquos comment succinctly represents the perspectives of correctional officers who appreciate working in the highly controlled IMU environment with trusted partners
I think IMU is one of the safest places to work in the whole prison system I mean theyre locked down 23 out of 24 hours a day youre escorting them with another person theyre in restraints Yeah things can happen Sure the y can make weapons Sure they can do ndash but they can do that out there more easily To me you know what you have in an IMU and you got some ndash at least you got a partner there with you under the circumstances
32
In sum IMU staff largely like their jobs tr ust their colleagues and immediate supervisors and feel safe at work This solid foundation of satisfaction and professionalism is a significant asset to DOC leadership work ing with line staff to communicate about and implement IMU reforms
NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON STA FF OF IMU W ORK
Although staff described feeling safe in the IMU satisfaction with the work and loyalty and trust in their colleagues they also described negative effects of working in the IMU environment especially ongoing negative mental and physical health consequences Among the 90 staff completing surveys the average staff member reported their overall health was good (a rating of 3 out of 5) A significant minority of staff (one quarter) however reported their overall health was poor or fair (a rating of 1 or 2 out of 5) While their self-assessments of their overall health varied staff consistently reported high levels of stress the average staff member reported their overall stress level as moderate (a rating of 2 out of 3) and one -third of all respondents reported the ir overall stress levels as high (a rating of 3 out of 3) Staff consistently reported that these high stress levels affected their overall health 80 percent of staff reported that stress had affected their health either ldquosomerdquo or ldquoa lotrdquo (a rating of 2 or 3 out of 3) in the past year Overall staff thought DOC failed to address correctional officersrsquo physical and mental health concerns they consistently disagreed with positive statements like ldquo DOC provides adequate services to me et correctional officersrsquo physical health needs rdquo Additional investments in supporting staff well-being could be both well received and impactful
Comments on the surveys and our subsequent interviews with staff in IMUs provided context for these overall reports about high stress levels in the IMU First staff perceived having greater ndash and more unreasonable ndash obligations during a workday in the IMU than elsewhere in the prison For example one correctional officer wrote ldquoIMU staff do twice as many duties as regular staff They never get compensated for all the extra wor k and stressrdquo This sentiment of imbalanced workload across units was echoed by another custody staff respondent ldquoStaff are
consistently overworked in the IMUs They are IMU staff identified key stressors required to do a job that requires twice the work of 1 Being overworked by additional a correctional officer working e lsewhere Staff deal
responsibilities with a lot of stress but are still reprimanded for 2 Being institutionally undervalued calling in sickrdquo
and under-supported 3 Needing to be hypervigilant at Second while staff often reported trusting
work and at home collaborative relationships with their immediate supervisors they perceived institutional leadership
as unsympathetic and indifferent to the unique stressors of working (and feeling overworked) in the IMU Specifically correctional officers criticized DOC in general for not providing support
33
for staff and thereby undermining safety in the IMU As one officer said (and m any others echoed) ldquoThis place does not care about staff All they care about is making things look good and keeping the offenders happy at all costs This results in COs sa ying screw it and not caring anymore which makes things unsaferdquo
Third while staff largely reported feeling safe at work in the IMU they also reported being hypervigilant on the job and also at home off the job Correctional officers reported that they were aware of the pervasiveness of risk in their work ldquoWe all have to understand that when we take a job like this anything can happen at any time That is the risk that we all take This job is not for everybodyrdquo Nearly all (98) survey respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they ldquoalways have to keep it in mind that t rouble could happen any timerdquo while at work Moreover respondentsrsquo levels of stress and perceptions of risk were strongly correlated those respondents who reported they worked in ldquodangerous jobsrdquo and were always dealing with ldquosome sort of crisisrdquo were also more likely to report higher stress levels
Importantly staff seemed to struggle with leaving these anxieties hypervigilant states of mind and stressors at work Staff consistently described being on edge and worried about their safety outside of work As one staff member said
I definitely notice like going to hellip fairs and that kind of stuff in the summer with the family hellip Irsquom definitely looking around a lot more Even going to like banks I look around a lot more I constantly ndash my headrsquos constantly on a swivel and Irsquo m in a place I donrsquo t really know Irsquo m definitely looking ndash grocery store Irsquo m constantly looked down ndash standing in the checkout line because there rsquos a million people standing there and yoursquo re constantl y look ing around lik e oh y eah that guyrsquos done time that guy has done time Like it rsquos - you can ndash itrsquos really weird when definitely get a sense for that kind of stuff And definitely keep an eye out
Another described how this habit of ldquolooking aroundrdquo and ldquokeeping an eye outrdquo was both a source of stress and a necessity for safety ldquoMy wife gives me a hard time about it all the time Shes like lsquoDo you ever turn the dirt bag meter off rsquo hellip And it may drive her nuts but i t keeps my family saferdquo One of the most common manifestations of this hypervigilance staff described Messaging about steps WADOC
is taking to value and support was being sure to sit in corners and face out looking at staff is critical some of these doors ldquoIn a restaurant I canrsquo t sit with my back to a steps should involve addressing group of peoplerdquo And another said ldquoI wonrsquo t let people pervasive hypervigilance and its
get behind me rdquo A growing body of literature about effects on stress correctional officer health suggests this pervasive
34
hypervigilance among correctional officers has long-term traumatic effects our data suggests that working in the IMU may exacerbate these effects 11
In sum our surveys of and interviews with staff revealed specific stress ors associated with work in the IMU the pressure of additional responsibilities and feeling overworked a sense of being institutionally undervalued and under -supported and percepti ons of high risk leading to persistent hypervigilance even outside of work These specific sources of stress in turn suggest areas where DOC could intervene to mitigate stress For instance messaging about steps DOC is taking to value and support staff and about DOC awareness of the additional work pressures some reforms entail could mitigate stress improve the culture of IMUs and even facilitate acceptance of future reforms For instance to the extent reforms actually reduce risk o r violence in the IMU communicating this clearly to staff could mitigate some of the hypervigilance that makes their work and home lives stressful
STAFF DESIRE FOR P OLICY INPUT
Staff expressed frustration with and resistance to reforms imposed on them fr om ldquoheadquartersrdquo In our survey of staff most staff across all facilities (63 percent) said that they ldquooften find it difficult to agree with this Departmentrsquo s policies on important issuesrdquo Likewise in our interviews with correctional officers and serge ants (45 of our 77 staff interviews) the majority (80 percent) reported that they experienced tension and conflict around IMU policies Indeed while three -quarters of staff reported that their immediate supervisors frequently asked for their opinions two-thirds reported that higher level administrators either ldquoneverrdquo or ldquorarelyrdquo asked for the ir opini ons
However when we asked staff to elaborate on what was wrong with IMU policies and reforms they almost always focused on the process by which reforms we re introduced rathe r than on the substance of the policy They described simply being told that a policy had changed without either being asked whether they agreed with the change or understanding why the policy had changed Specifically correctional officers and sergeants complained that administrative decision-makers above them were out of touch with the r eality of cur rent operations ldquoThey just make the decision hellip but we really donrsquo t have any say or influence how those kinds of decision are made They rsquore made by administrators that havenrsquo t been unit staff
11 See Lois James amp Natalie Todak ldquoPrison employment and post-traumatic stress disorder Risk and protective factorsrdquo American Journal of Industrial Medicine Vol 619 (2018) 725-32
35
in a long long time That donrsquo t remember or they forgot where they came fromrdquo Staff interpreted their lack of opportunities for input as some combination of leadership being lazy and uncaring ldquoLik e lsquowhy are they having us do this Donrsquo t they understand that this is a bad idea you knowrsquo You know the option is either they do understand itrsquo s a bad idea and they dont care or they donrsquo t know and theyrsquo re you know canrsquo t be bothered to askrdquo
On the other hand when unit managers or other leadership staff solicited the opinions of line staff about policy implementation the staff tended to be more accepting and less critical of the policy For instance in one facility a staff member described a policy change to allow porters on third shift in restrictive housing and how the sergeant and correctional unit supervisor (CUS) consulted the correctional officers about how to implement the policy ldquoSo what they did is the sergeant and the CUS came and ta lked to the staff and said lsquoWho would you guys recommend They have to be IMS program They have to be level four And they have to infraction-freersquo Fine So we all picked as a group hellip He was super polite model inmaterdquo While the correctional staff we re not involved in the formal policy decision to install porters on third shift administrators made room for correctional officersrsquo input and involvement by allowing them to choose who that person would be By involving correctional officers in that proce ss they increased staff support for and buy-in to the policy change
Indeed our research team heard repeatedly from staff that simply having the opportunity to talk with us about their work express their opinions and reflect on their experiences was a comfort and a relief ldquolike a weight off their shouldersrdquo Staff told us this individually duri ng interviews and communicated this during our de-briefs with unit leadership at the end Staff wanted more input into policy ndashto have
of each site visit in the summer of 201 7 The a chance to air their opinions and to have
eager and thoughtful participation by staff in input into mechanisms of policy
our interviews provides yet another implementation on the ground
indication of their interest in and wi llingness to engage in conversations about policy reform In fact bringing in outside researchers to systematically seek input from staff (as DOC frequently d oes) whether in the form of surveys or interviews might be one way to increase both staff perce ptions that they have a voice in policy processes and their willingness to implement new policies
In sum survey responses interview analyses and informal conversations all suggest that the manner in which reform and policy changes are presented to sta ff matters the more the policy is explained and the more staff input is solicited in the reform process especially as to the details and mechanisms of policy implementation the more likely staff will be to support and facilitate reform implementation
36
STAFF OBJECTIONS TO I MU R EFORMS
While staff most frequently complained about the manner in which reforms were introduced and especially about their lack of input in policy implementation they also described specific objections to reforms ndash largely in terms of the impact these reforms had on their day -to-day work and their percepti ons of whether or not staff safety and well- being were being pr ioritized
First staff perceived many reforms as prioritizing prisoner well-being over staff well-being IMU staff described IMU prisoners as the ldquoworst of the worstrdquo ndash the least deserving of the undeserving And they repeatedly described any new or additional benefits to prisoners ndash whether additional commissary items more time out of cell or more programming opportunities ndash as being risky and harmful to staff In some cases staff perceived the reforms or benefits to prisoners as pushing staff into new job roles for w hich they lacked both time and training For instance one correctional officer said ldquoI mean usually we come here and we have to do our job which is you know the yard showers and all that and you know guys say they program and we donrsquo t have time to figure out what theyrsquo re programming I mean thatrsquo s not our job description rdquo And another correctional officer described feeling as if he was expected to ldquodo more with lessrdquo ldquoYou know the other big thing with the removal of staff is the addition of programs you know So it seems like the classic managerial approach of do more with less and thatrsquos you know never well received by the people that have to do the more with lessrdquo In other words staff tended to see rehabilitative -oriented reforms as both a burden and oppositional to their fundamental job role ndash to maintain safety and security
Second staff perceived reforms addressing individual prisonersrsquo special needs like ext reme mental illness as inconsistent In fact staff repeatedly described individualized treatment as dangerous ndash encouraging prisoners to exploit and manipulate the rules to their own benefit For instance one correctional officer described his objecti ons to a protocol for responding to instances of feces-smear ing in the IMU ldquoIt is a
Staff characterized reforms as inconsistent manipulation point and they figured that out risky and dangerous Avoiding publicly
Hey on a Tuesday and Thursday we donrsquo t contradicting staff and communicating have yard and showers Well I want to take a more systematically about the benefits of shower so Irsquom going to smear feces on t he reform for staff could minimize resistance wall so I can go get my shower Thatrsquo s how that works And we have to do i trdquo Other correctional officers objected to provision of things like a nerf ball for throwing or soap for carving ndash both individualized attempts to address specific behavioral problems ndash as opening the door for other prisoners to make new demands both adding to officersrsquo daily list of obligations and making security harder to maintain
37
Third staff described how reforms prioritizing prisonersrsquo needs undermined their ability to safely manage a difficult population For instance one correctional officer described his frustration with trying to enforce the rules and being undermined or chastised by supervisors who were prioritizing prisoner well- being
Lots of the time we rsquore more nervous about getting in trouble for refusing guys If you ask them (about) yard and shower and they donrsquo t answer and you ask them multiple times and raising your voice to hopefully get their reaction then turn around and you refuse them and then all of a sudden they rsquore bitching and moaning about it and then all of a sudden now theyrsquo re getting it Itrsquo s just one of those things where it gets discouraging but it rsquos ndash I can only do my job
Another correctional officer described frustration with reforms seeking to limit the imposition of infractions and sanctions within the IMU ldquoNow you try to correct an inmate rsquos actions ndash Irsquo ve seen a lot of my infractions get thrown out not even processed hellip to where wersquo re not holding the people responsible And that becomes a safety risk for us Because the inmates donrsquo t show that same respectrdquo In sum correctional officers emphasize consistency as a tool for both maintaining their own authority and minimizing manipulation by prisoners
Staff did not simply describe how and why they objected to IMU reforms They also described how they resisted these reforms undermining policy implementation by ldquo burningrdquo prisoners on out-of-cell time breaking rules adhering to the letter rather than the spirit of a policy and encouraging grievances against leadership Often correctional officers justifi ed non-compliance or undermining policies as the only way to compensate for a lack of resources such as staff shortages and time limitations during a shift When describing this kind of undermining of policies interviewees contextualized these strategie s as coping strategies necessary to mitigate resource issues staff explained that additional programming and movement required more time and careful planning over the course of a shift For example one correctional officer described how he purposefully tried to reduce movement during his shift by asking about yards and showers as early as possible He elaborated about this tactic
It often results in the pri soner fi ling a gr ievance with the i nstitution Howeve r custody staff are aware of this and encourage these kinds of grievances as they provide evidence for their argument that administration are making unrealistic demands on them with the introduction of new policies and programs in restrictive housing units
Not all IMU correctional officers were so resistant to reform however For instance another officer (a sergeant) described IMU policies as changing frequently but characterized adapting to those changes as part of his job ldquoI adapt pretty well with the change You have to around
38
here Itrsquo s changing every day Whether itrsquo s a good change or not yoursquo re going to have your personal opinion and I sometimes donrsquo t agree but again Irsquo m a person who adapts to changerdquo This same office r in fact articulately described the importance of orienting re spectfully rather than punitive ly to prisoners in the IMU
I just always treat them as I would want to be treated or how I was raised which is with communication and just being respectful Irsquoll try to give you an example Like somebody will say lsquo That guyrsquos not going to get out of his cellrsquo Irsquo m going to say lsquo Whyrsquo Hersquo s going to say lsquo Because he was arguing with me and he rsquos a threat nowrsquo I go lsquoWell why not work wi th the guy and talk to him to tr y to come up with a better resolution rsquo Rather than just no movement and pi ss him off some more because no movementrsquo s not going to teach him any different than he rsquos already doing I mean if yoursquo re swearing and cussing at me you got your arms out and your fists going at me thatrsquo s not going to h elp you by having no movement Talking it outrsquos going to help you more So Irsquo m more of a ndash I guess Irsquom a littl e more libe ral on that part
While some staff we interviewed described this kind of ldquorespectfulrdquo or ldquoliberalrdquo approach as ldquodrinking the K ool-Aidrdquo of reform arguments coming from headquarters plenty of others asserted at least acceptance of if not also support for the ldquorespectfulrdquo approach As David Lovell noted comparing interviews he conducted in the early 2000s to those he conducted as part of our team in 2017 ldquoA hell of a lot has changed I did not hear the same stories about neglect and abuserdquo 12
In sum understanding the specific objections staff raised to existing reforms is critical to minimizing resistance and encouraging successful implementation of future reforms Indeed the specific objections staff raised to reforms suggest important areas where communication between line staff and supervisors could be clarified and improved
bull The perceived contradiction between rehabilitation and saf ety could be acknowledged and addressed in communicating with staff about reforms
bull The possibilities for simultaneously improving both prisoner and staff well- being through reform could be emphasized
12 Conversation with David Lovell Feb 24 2021 notes on file with author
39
bull Supervisors and non-custody staff advocating for indiv idualized interventions need to (1) address line staff concerns with inconsistency in treatment and policy and (2) strategize to avoid undermining line staffrsquo s authority in day-to-day interactions
IMPACTS ON PRISONERS
In this section we focus on our analysis of the interviews we conducted with a random sample of 106 maximum custody status IMU prisoners in the summer of 2017 and re -interviews conducted with 80 of these participants still incarcerated in the summer of 20 18 Where relevant we also include some findings from the 225 surveys we collected from prisoners in IMUs in the spring of 2017 Our random sample of 106 prisoner interview participants had a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU and mean of 5 prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Forty -two percent of our participants were white 12 percent were African American 23 percent were Latino 23 percent were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differences between our participants and all people held in IMU s at the time of our interviews People in the general prison population at the time of our interviews however were notably different than those held in IMU as they are older less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang -affiliated and less likely to be Latino
In this section we highlight six themes from our interviews with prisoners Each suggests areas where Washington DOC is supporting and encouraging IMU prisoners as well as areas wher e DOC is already well-positioned to make further improvements to prisoner well-being trust access to programs social contact policies health (both physical and mental) long-term management challenges and reentry
TRUSTING STA FF TO B E RESPONSIVE
A central theme of our interviews was that prisoners largely trusted DOC staff to meet their basic needs for food care and safety Prisoners consistently expressed confidence that things like kites grievances and mail would be handled and delivered in good faith They understood processes for communicating needs and concerns and expected to receive timely (if not always
satisfactory) responses to their requests and Prisoners in WADOC frequently complaints Indeed when we asked prisoners if they described experiences of basic
trusted staff from correctional officers to healthcare procedural justice they understood providers they said things like ldquoI got a lot of respect for the rules trusted processes and themrdquo and ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo and ldquothey are just doing their mostly respected staff jobrdquo While prisoners did not describe staff as friends or
advocates neither did they describe them as enemies or opponents This is surprising In many prison settings in which our team has conducted research we have witnessed and documented
40
more adversarial relationships between prisoners and staff with less trust that policies and procedures will be followed devoid of respect expressed in simple phrases like ldquotheyrsquo re OK rdquo
To be clear prisoners frequently complained about the answers they received to kites the quality of medical care they received and the way some staff treated them But their complaints tended to focus on procedures and policies rather than on individual instances of mistreatment This suggests a baseline of trust in process The idea that rules are transparently knowable and fairl y appl ied is often called procedural justice people who experience procedural justice are more likely to pe rceive rules and institutions as legitimate and therefore to follow those rules and comply with institutional policies13 The baseline of trust ndash and associated perception of procedural justice ndash we documented among IMU prisoners reflects an existing infrastructure and institutional culture that can facilitate further reform like sharing new information and gaining buy -in for new policies and procedures
PROGRAMS ACCESS CHALLENGES AND UNREALIZED POTENTIAL
In our visits to IMUs across Washington over two years and in our conversations with prisoners and staff we learned about a dizzying arr ay of programs available to prisoners in the IMU A2A ACT chemical dependency reading groups and in-cell course work Although prisoners were often eager to participate in these programs both in order to make their IMU time productive and in order to fulfill the requirements for release from the IMU they were frustrated with long program waitlists Prisoners described wait times of six months or more in order to get into programs or courses they were required to take before leaving the IMU They under stood that a variety of factors contributed to these long wait times including time to be transferred to the
designated programming IMU limited Prisoners experienced waiting for I MU- number of seats available for each program based programs as extra punishment and program duration WADOC could communicate more clearly with prisoners about how programming For many participants waiting to get into waitlists are organized and how waiting programs was the most frustrating aspect of affects IMU stays and good time their housing in IMU because they
experienced the wait times as an extra punishment ndash one they feared would extend their overall time in prison ndash actually making the day-to-day conditions of their confinement harder to bear First prisoners worried that they were either losing good time while waiting for programming or receiving additional
13 Tom R Tyler ldquoProcedural Justice Legitimacy and the Effective Rule of Lawrdquo Crime amp J ustice Vol 30 283-357 (2003)
41
punishments by being ldquopushed bac krdquo onto longer wait lists As time spent in the IMU can impact prisonersrsquo early release dates long progr am wai t times wer e pe rceived as an e xtra punishment essentially adding to a prison sentence This is a place where DOC could build on the foundation of trust and procedural justice described in the prior section to simply communicate more clearly with prisoners about how waitlists are constructed and whether and how they are impacting good time and release dates
Second prisoners described the time waiting for programs as not just frustrating because it amounted to more time spe nt in the IMU and sometimes eve n more time in prison but also ldquotaxing mentallyrdquo They described waiting in the IMU as ldquodead time rdquo leaving one prisoner feeling like a ldquodog in a cage rdquo and another feeling ldquoanger all the timerdquo Yet another prisoner described doing the same set of packets three different times while waiting for a spot in face -to-face class like A2A
Once prisoners were able to enroll in programs they often found the content disappointing in specific ways too r epetitious (ldquothe same content over and over againrdquo) not compatible with daily life in the IMU and structured to prior itize a pragmatic attitude over a learning mindset One prisoner described this pragmatic mindset ldquoIf they put them in the Hole ndash they rsquore going to do their Hole time they rsquore going to their little program
WADOC has built an but theyrsquore going to do what they want to do Theyrsquore impressive infrastructure to already set in their ways and nothing rsquos really going to support IMU programming but change themrdquo And another explained ldquoThey force it the content of those programs
upon you which automatically makes an individual want could be improved to be more to rebel rdquo Prisoners also noted the tensions between relevant to IMU prisoners what programs teach and the challenges participants face in the general prison population For many the e mphasis on be havioral change clashed with a prison environment that hindered application of pro-social skills and strategies As one prisoner said ldquo But letrsquos be honest this isnrsquo t ndash it didnt help you didnrsquo t change you nonerdquo Another explained that people often made -up scenarios for role-playing interactions just to complete the program rather than actually engaging with real-life experiences and events
In addition to these general critiques of IMU programs as (1) prioritizing just getting through in order to get out of the IMU and (2) not acknowledging the everyday challenges of prison life prisoners described more specific shortcoming of curricula In some cases prisoners said they had to complete too much of the curriculum alone in their cells ldquoItrsquos meant to be a program where itrsquos supposed to be done with other people where you can sit in a group and talk And they have us do it in our cells So that right there itself I mean how does that work rdquo In other cases prisoners described the programs as loosely adapted from programs designed for juveniles in fact a number of participants had experienced the same curriculum while
42
incarcerated as juveni les Prisoners repeatedly expressed a hope that the curriculum could be more tailored to the adult setting Prisoners also noted that program materials were not always translated for non-English speakers or useful for prisoners who were illiterate In these instances programming was counterproductive to the goals of reform
While participants were critical of the programming they expressed this criticism in the context of wanting to use their IMU time productively being eager for classes and learning opportunities and appreciating the good- faith efforts of DOC in providing programming opportunities Indeed DOC is in a particularly positive position having developed the infrastructure for programming in the IMU the personnel to staff this space and even the interest among prisoners to take advantage of programming Figuring out how to get more meaningful content into this existing infrastructure should be relatively easy compared to the immense work that has already been done to build the infrastructure for and interest in programming among both prisoners and staff
SOCIAL CONTACT POLICIES
In the restrictive c onditions of the IMU one set of policies was both especially troubling to prisoners and especially likely to jeopardize their well-being during and after their IMU placements policy r estrictions on whom they could be in contact with while in the IMU and practical barriers to making contact with even those people on their permitted contact lists
Specifically prisoner s frequently told us that while in the IMU they were only permitted to receive visits from immediate family members parents siblings legal spouses and chi ldren Prisoners understood DOCrsquo s definition of family as excluding unwed partners children prisoners are participating in raisin g who were not legally or biologically their own close friends and other individuals playing important roles in prisonersrsquo lives While there may be
many valid security and management reasons for Prisoners experienced barriers to limiting visitation for IMU residents the immediate -communication ndash especially restricted family-only rules in the IMU impose additional visitation possibilities and limited
layers of isolation on prisoners who have no phone access ndash as some of the
immediate family those who have a strong hardest parts of doing IMU time Both connection with extended family members (eg prisonersrsquo mental health and their re-aunts uncles cousins) and those who have entry prospects deteriorate when
family ties and social bonds fray nurtured strong bonds with friends colleagues or mentors For instance one prisoner participant
who had been in foster care described his frustration with not being able to have a visit with a critical mentor ldquoI have a mentor from the streets who works in a non-profit center for LGBTQ people Hersquo s not my immediate relative so he canrsquo t come here to visit me rdquo Even when
43
prisoners had immediate family who we re e ligible to visit geographic di stance and une xpected lockdowns thwarted visitation plans T he prisoners we interviewed repeatedly identified visitation protocols and distance as two primary factors preventing face -to-face contact with support networks during periods of isolation
Indeed practical barriers including both the location of the IMUs a nd the challenges of regularly accessing the phone in the IMU also disrupted IMU residentsrsquo abilities to maintain connections with their outside support networks While prisoners on mainline may place a phone call throughout various hours each day ndash except for during count and meals ndash telephone access in the IMU is reduced to one hour five times a week during recreational time In the IMU this recreational time varies daily and might not occur at all on certain days of the week Even when prisoners did get into the yard they complained that the phones were unreliable a line would be dead or the person on the other end of the line would not be able to hear them for instance So a prisoner wishing to speak regularly even to an immediate family member l ike a child or spouse might not be able to maintain any kind of consistent communication As one participant described
When I was in isolation last time that put tension [on my marriage] My wife and I were used to having three phone calls a day and we were al ways se nding emails back and forth and getting contact visits on a weekly basis When I got [placed in solitary confinement] little by little I noticed that there was distance growing between us hellip My marriage didnrsquo t work out after that
These rule-based and practical barriers to social contact and the resulting frayed familial and social networks have documented consequences for prisonersrsquo well-being in and out of the IMU Among the random sample of prisoners we interviewed the weaker prisonersrsquo familial attachments the more likely they were to have mental health problems Of those prisoners who reported strong familial attachments only 15 percent had a history of self-harm But of those prisoners who did not report strong familial attachments 85 percent had a history of self -harm14 Indeed our analysis suggests that maintaining social bonds is critical to surviving time in the IMU Strong social bonds both allow prisoners to embody roles as part of social webs beyond that of ldquo convictrdquo and provide material and emotional support advocacy and psychological stability A robust body of social science confirms this finding docume nting how
14 To calculate this we linked histories of self-harm from BPRS and medical records (a yesno binary variable) to interview transcripts In coding in terview transcripts we identified those participants who had described having ldquostrongrdquo family b onds and m aintaining re gular family c ommunications and w e identified those participants who described having limited or no communication with family
44
social bonds facilitate successful re-entry after prison and l ong-term criminal desistance15 In sum facilitating the maintenance of existing social bonds for prisoners in the IMU will likely mitigate the mental health impacts of the restrictive conditions and facilitate more successful re-entry into the general prison population and society
One possible way to facilitate maintenance of social bonds could be through provision of tablets i n the IMU In fact in our year -two interviews prisoners described being able to communicate with the outside world ndash especially with JPAY players they had missed in the IMU ndash as the greatest form of freedom post-IMU During our second-year interviews with prisoners no longer in the IMU several participants we re even compelled to retrieve their JPAY players to show to us The player proved critical to re -entry facilitating immediate contact with prisonersrsquo friends and family Such communication was
IMU prisoners described JPAY players especially important for those whose loved ones as critical to easing their re-entry into lived out of state or could not visit in-person And the general prison population
the JPAY technology especially facilitated Providing some access to tablets in intergenerational communication with younger the IMU could mitigate some of the family members ndash like nieces and nephews ndash who frayed social bonds prisoners are less inclined to handwrite letters or talk on the describe experiencing there phone Former IMU prisoners described writing electronic messages sharing and saving photos and engaging in video calls By providing access to the outside world JPAY players gave prisoners an opportunity to reflect on process and express their experiences to those they cared about most As one participant explained ldquo Like itrsquos easier to text than write than actually ndash lsquo cause yoursquo re able to take a moment reflect on what you want to say than when yoursquore having a conversation So itrsquo s a lot easier It also builds relationshipsrdquo JPAY players were also a source of entertainment for prisoners in (re)constructing their daily routines Being able to listen to music or play games on their devices
15 Cochran JC ldquoBreaches in the wall Imprisonment social support and recidivismrdquo Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 512 (2014) 200-229 Cochran JC and Mears DP ldquoSocial isolation and inmate behavior A conceptual framework for theorizing prison visitation and guiding and assessing researchrdquo Journal of Criminal Justice 414 (2013) 252-261 Liu S Pickett JT and B aker T ldquoInside the black box Prison visitation the costs of offending and inmate social capitalrdquo Criminal Justice Policy Review 278 (2016) 766-790 Martinez DJ and Christian J ldquoThe familial relationships of former prisoners Examining the link between residence and informal support mechanismsrdquo Journal of Contemporary E thnography 382 (2009) 201-224 Mills A and Codd H ldquoPrisoners families and offender management Mobilizing social capitalrdquo Probation Journal 551 (2008) 9-24 Naser RL and La Vigne NG ldquoFamily support in the prisoner reentry process Expectations and realitiesrdquo Journal of Offender Rehabilitation 431 (2006) 93-106 Swanson C Lee CB Sansone FA and Tatum KM ldquoPrisonersrsquo perceptions of father-child relationships and social supportrdquo American Journal of Criminal Justice 373 (2012) 338-355 Wallace D Fahmy C Cotton L Jimmons C McKay R Stoffer S and Syed S ldquoExamining the role of familial support d uring prison and after r elease on post-incarceration mental healthrdquo International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 601 (2016) 3-20
45
helped break up the monotony as prisoners re -adjusted to general population Players also helped prisoners plan for the future whether org anizing their legal or other personal affairs
That said p risoners also described problems with JPAY players For many prisoners the costs of the players and video messaging were prohibitive (even if chea per than travel costs for in- person visits) P risoners who only took advantage of the JPAY kiosks wished for the increased communication with family and friends facilitated by an individual player JPAY expenses create inherent inequities in communication which are in turn likely to affect re -entry J PAY use is also contingent upon technological capacity For instance many participants shared stories of frustration and anxiety when they could not use their player after the prison Wi-Fi went down
In sum the communication and entertainment potentials of tablets make the devices valuable to prisoners adjusting to life outside of the IMU and might also repair social bonds otherwise frayed by IMU placements Acce ss costs and capacity however would have to be addressed in expanding the benefits of tablets to pr isoners during and post-IMU The use of JPAY players (or other tablets) during IMU placement is worth further consideration To be clear tablets are not an appropriate replacement for in- person visitation even in the IMU they simply have potential as an additional resource to further support the social contacts and bonds that mitigate the harms of restrictive housing
HEALTH
Our interviews with IMU prisoners and especially our systematic applica tion of the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale during these interviews established that time in the IMU has significant physical and mental health consequences for prisoners In two articles published in leading public health journals the American Journal of Public He alth and PLOS ONE we detail the mental and physical health consequences of IMU time we include those articles as Appendices D and E respectively and we summarize the fin dings here
First prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of psychiatr ic symptoms suicide attempts and incidents of self-harm and were more
We found high rates of serious mental health than twice as likely to have a serious problems in the IMU mental illness designation as prisoners in
bull 1 in 4 IMU prisoners had clinically significant the general prison population Our initi al symptoms of depression and anxiety sample of 106 participants had a mean bull 1 in 2 IMU prisoners had clinically significant BPRS rating of 37 and a median rati ng of psychiatric distress 33 (out of a possible range from 24 to bull IMU prisoners were 2x as likely as GP 168) suggesting mild psychiatric prisoners to have an SMI designation symptoms among the study population
46
at the time of our interviews Analysis of individual BPRS items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms Further analysis of BPRS factors (measuring 3-4 symptoms commonly associated with one another) as opposed to individual items provided additional evidence of clinically significant psychiatric distress in as much as half of the population sampled as with the depression-anxiety-guilt-somatization (DAGS) factor See Table 2 below for a summary of these findings Importantly the BPRS assesses only symptoms experienced in the last two weeks so BPRS scores may well undercount psychiatric symptoms experienced intermittently over longer periods
Administrative data support the finding of long-term psychological distress Among our respondents 19 percent had serious mental illness (SMI) designations 22 percent had a documented suicide attempt and 18 percent had documentation of other self-harm all at some point during their incarceration either before or during their time in the IMU Moreover respondents with SMI designations were more likely to report positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms than non-SMI respondents (See Table 3 in the AJPH article for more details) These findings support the validity of the BPRS assessments
Qualitative interview data revealed symptoms not otherwise captured by the BPRS and medical files Two classes of symptoms were reported by a majority of respondents toll of being in the IMU (80 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 359 times) and the psychological consequences of social isolation (73 of respondents cumulatively the topic was mentioned 192 times) Two additional symptoms were as prevalent as other clinically significant BPRS items like anxiety references to sensory hypersensitivity (16 of respondents mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Given these findings in year two follow-up interviews with prisoner participants we also included PC-PTSD-5 instrument questions to assess the prevalence and severity of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Within the month preceding the interview more than 40 percent of participants (44 of 79) indicated 3 or more symptoms of PTSD the baseline score for establishing a probable PTSD diagnosis As discussed further in the re-entry section below these symptoms of PTSD were closely linked to earlier experiences in the IMU
Second prisoners in the IMU reported high rates of physical health problems associated with their confinement in the IMU In 2017 15 percent of interview participants reported having clinically significant somatic concerns (concerns ldquoover present bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80 respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 percent reported clinically significant ratings of somatic concerns Of those who reported a clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were re-interviewed in 2018 25 percent indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic
47
concerns in 2018 Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 percent reported clinically significant somatic concerns compared to just 8 percent of those housed in the general prison population While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
Table 2 BPRS Symptom and Factor Prevalence 2017 and 2018
2017 (N=106) IMU 2018 (N=28) Non IMU 2018 (N=52) - Symptoms16 Depression 2450 2500 1538
(n=26) (n=7) (n=8) Anxiety 2450 3214 2885
(n=26) (n=9) (n=15) Somatic Concern 1510 2143 769
(n=16) (n=6) (n=4) Guilt 1790 1786 769
(n=19) (n=5) (n=4) Hostility 1130 1786 1731
(n=12) (n=5) (n=9) Hallucinations 940 1429 1154
(n=10) (n=4) (n=6) Excitement 1040 1429 769
(n=11) (n=4) (n=4) Factors17
Positive 1600 1790 1350
(n=17) (n=5) (n=7) Negative 470 360 380
(n=5) (n=1) (n=2) DAGS 4910 4290 4810
(n=52) (n=12) (n=25) Mania 1700 1430 1730
(n=18) (n=4) (n=9)
16 Only clinically significant symptoms (rating of 4 or higher) that were reported by 10 or more of the sample are presented 17 Factors combine 3-4 different symptoms commonly associated with one another Positive = hallucinations unusual thought content and conceptual disorganization Negative = blunted affect emotional withdrawal and motor retardation DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization Mania = elevated mood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement
48
concerns in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 percent confidence level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test)
Data from our 225 initial surveys collected from IMU prisoners also indicated high rates of concerns with physical health among the IMU population Of the 225 survey respondents 63 percent expressed health concerns 48 percent were taking medication 17 percent had arthritis and 8 percent had experienced a fall in solitary confinement And 82 percent replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo while in the IMU
Based on these high rates of reported concerns with physical health both among survey respondents and on the BPRS assessments of interview subjects we systematically analyzed all references to physical health concerns in the prisoner interview transcripts Through this analysis we identified three pervasive physical health concerns among IMU prisoners skin irritations weight fluctuations and musculoskeletal pain
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They understood these conditions as being directly associated with poor air and water quality irritating hygiene products and a lack of sun exposure inherent to IMU conditions of confinement Likewise participants described the interrelationship between a lack of nutritious food or adequate calories in the IMU feelings of lethargy and being too overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day and rapid weight fluctuations experienced during periods spent in the IMU Participants described their weight going down with regular and social exercise routines and going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exercise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations highlight the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU Finally participants spoke frequently about one specific chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to them in the IMU
In addition to specifying these physical health concerns participants described multiple barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU First prisoner respondents worried about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response if staff ultimately deemed
We found common patterns of physical health problems in the IMU bull Skin irritations bull Weight fluctuations bull Musculoskeletal pain
Barriers to receiving adequate healthcare in the IMU bull Fear of incurring more IMU time bull Lack of privacy bull $4 co-pay
49
their health issue to be non- emergent This fear prevented them from seeking care even when they were experiencing concern ing symptoms like heart palpitations Second prisoner respondents worried about the lack of privacy available to them if they sought or needed any form of healthcare needing to hand a medical kite to a correctional officer passing by needing to speak with a nurse at ldquocell-frontrdquo in e arshot of other s or submitting to a restrained ldquoescortrdquo to a medical treatment area The lack of privacy was a particular deterrent to seeking mental health care due to stigma around mental illness in prison and fear of b eing targeted by other prisoners as a result of their seeking mental health treatment Third prisoner respondents were dissuaded from seeking care by the $4 co-pay for a non-emergency medical appointment (for non-indigent prisoners) Because of IMU polici es capping overall prisoner spending for any need (whether healthcare food or toiletries) this $4 co-pay represented a larger proportion of their available money in the IMU than in the general population and so represented an additional barrier to seeki ng care from within the IMU Physical and mental health concerns in the IMU might be mitigated and reduced by addressing some of these barriers to IMU residents seeking and accessing care
LONG-TERM MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES IN TH E IMU
While we have focused in much of this section on common and prevalent experiences across our random sample of interview subjects a small subset of the people we interviewed had different experiences in the IMU and presented different challenges to DOC For instance we interviewed IMU pri soners who had re peatedly assaul ted staff repeatedly se riously harmed themselves or repeatedly committed serious rule violations as soon as they were released from the IMU in self-described efforts at sabotage In other words these prisoners r eflect a small group of those with ongoing or severe behavioral challenges DOC officials were actively engaged with following the behavioral trajectories of these prisoners meeting with them individually and investigating options to shorten their time in IMU This is laudable
Another population that presents serious long-Washington is well-positioned to pilot term management challenges for DOC are STG -and promote new initiatives focusing identified prisoners Among the random sample of on viable placement and programming
IMU prisoners we interviewed nearly one -third alternatives for IMU prisoners with (29 percent) had been in the IMU for at least one ongoing severe behavioral challenges year Of these more than half (55 percent) were
STG members or affiliates Of these three were awaiting out- of-state transfer due to ongoing serious STG-related activity Again these are small numbers of prisoners but they represent significant management challenges absorbing DOC time and resources and driving up key restrictive housing metrics like average lengths of stay frequency of cycling in and out of the IMU and the racial disproportionality of IMU placements (see Figures 8 and 9 above)
50
To date much solitary confinement reform nationwide has ignored such difficult cases focusing instead on the more widespread over-use of solitary confinement for prisoners who have not committed serious rule violations as with prisoners serving indefinite solitary confinement terms in California prisons due to gang status labels (prior to the Ashker reforms) or prisoners who have spent extended terms in solitary confinement for non-serious or single infractions Having successfully reduced IMU populations (albeit with some fluctuations) and lengths of IMU terms Washington is well-positioned to pilot and promote new initiatives focusing on viable placement and programming alternatives for IMU prisoners with ongoing severe behavioral challenges As Washington officials know too well no single solution is likely to address the wide range of behavioral challenges among those individuals who have experienced repeated extended IMU placements
One commonality we noticed among IMU ldquolong-termersrdquo was that they often felt they had nothing (more) to lose through misbehavior whether they had histories of serious violence against themselves or others To the extent Washington officials are able to provide hope and resources to these prisoners these prisonersrsquo calculations about the desirability of violence shift For instance providing one IMU prisoner with a nerf ball to throw another with soap to carve and scheduling weekly headquarter check-ins with a third at least anecdotally reduced misbehavior and violence In future research we look forward to further analyzing both these specific cases and broader DOC efforts to address individual and group behavioral challenges
RE-ENTRY
IMU prisoners overwhelmingly looked forward to being released back into the general prison population They associated re-entering the general population with improved access to clothing food hygiene products exercise programming and medical care And transitioning back to the general population offered opportunities to feel ldquohumanrdquo again ldquoWell it allows you to have contact It allows you to be human It allows you to see what people do on a daily basis that come from the field or to work and allow me to sub-act that Allowing you to copy what is considered humanrdquo
But re-entry came with challenges and anxieties too Prisoners reported significant difficulty readjusting to regular social contact upon leaving solitary confinement Transitioning to multiple-person housing or a particularly bustling unit is challenging to navigate after having extremely limited interactions with people for months or years Something as simple as shaking hands represents a significant amount of contact for someone just released from IMU Prisoners also develop different privacy expectations while in isolation which can make re-entry feel like a ldquothousand eyes are watching yourdquo Re-adjusting to life in general population also entailed a level of choice and personal
51
responsibility not typically exercised in isolation prisoners described the challen ges of anticipating transfer to a new location figuring out the day -to-day processes of their new unit and acclimating to the work and social norms of a new group of correctional staff and fellow prisoners Transitioning back into the general population with new norms and fewer restrictions disrupted the consistent (and sometimes rigid) routines prisoners had developed to manage their time in solitary confinement
BPRS and PTSD scores confirmed ongoing Mental health symptoms experienced challenges with the mental health problems in the IMU persisted after release prisoners experienced in the IMU For along with new symptoms indicative instance in year -two interviews of PTSD Former IMU prisoners
therefore face ongoing mental health respondents not in the IMU experienced needs and challenges higher rates of clinically significant anxiety
(as scored through the BPRS) than they had in the IMU (See Table 2 above) And prisoners in our study not in the IMU in year two frequently described extreme sensitivity to any amount of noise feeling overwhelmed by the amount of movement and stimulation they experience d in the general population intrusive thoughts (like triggered memories and flashbacks) and an inability to stop experiencing symptoms of guilt and blame Each of these experiences are consistent with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) While IMU p risoners were often just trying to make it through upon release back into the ge neral prison population they continued to deal with the ongoing mental and physical challenges first experienced in the IMU The l ack of sensor y stimulation and social interaction in the IMU seemingly promotes rumination and fixation on traumatic disturbing or distressing memories and this rumination lingers even after leaving the IMU
One prisoner respondentrsquo s description of this constellation of symptoms which make the transition from the IMU to the general prison population difficult is representa tive
When you isolate us you kind of deprive us of those sensories everyday you know Like since Irsquove been here hellip Irsquo ve noticed like loud noise makes me feel I donrsquo t like it If therersquo s too much stuff going on I find myself I get all irritated If ther ersquos a l ot of people I ge t weirded out if the rersquos too much activity going on I kind of canrsquo t be around it Itrsquo s just it paranois me I donrsquot know why Itrsquo s only happened since Irsquo ve been in here this time I think itrsquo s because Irsquo ve been isolated for as long a s I have been Things that Irsquom not used to k ind of throws me through a loop
Likewise staff described how they observed these adjustment difficulties in prisoners leaving the IMU
52
I think theyrsquore uncomfortable being out of restraints around people hellip I donrsquot think they know what to do For example I used to watch them come out of IMU and in general population housing unit theyrsquod come to me and it would be strange for them to hellip have somebody walk up and say ldquoHey man howrsquos it goingrdquo and touch them Theyrsquore not used to people touching them hellip All that noise and all those people around them and having to share a cell with somebody and have somebody so close theyrsquore not used to that Those are effects of long-term restrictive housing I think they improve but ndash I mean Irsquove watched that happen over and over again
Prisoners contemplating release from the IMU not into the general prison population but instead onto the streets experienced significant anxiety about this looming transition As one prisoner described
Most people get released to the streets get a chance to go to hellip at least get out of the hole because they donrsquot want to release people to the streets from the hole because that causes safety risks For me they donrsquot have any options hellip My DOC officer is coming to pick me up itrsquos not like I wanted it to happen but hersquoll probably put me in handcuffs until I get to the office and actually wait to release me because until Irsquom out of their custody Irsquom still a security risk18
While we know DOC sought to ensure prisoners transitioned from the IMU into general population prior to release to the streets this was not possible in every case Understanding the challenges prisoners experience upon leaving the IMU and their anxieties about release are therefore especially important to designing transition and release plans
Our analysis shows that solitary confinement produces a unique cluster of mental health symptoms ndash including but not limited to cognitive decline anxiety depression hallucinations and PTSD19 Our interviews revealed an additional layer of difficulty for prisoners reentering the
18 While we sought to interview prisoners who had paroled between our year-one and year-two interviews we were not able to make contact with any of these individuals and so cannot systematically analyze actual experiences of release-to-the streets
19 Arrigo B A amp Bullock J L (2008) The psychological effects of solitary confinements on prisoners in supermax units Reviewing what we know and recommending what should change International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 52(6) 622-640 doi 1011770306624X07309720 Grassian S (2006) Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Washington Journal of Law amp Policy 22 325ndash383 Grassian S amp Friedman N (1986) Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confinement International Journal of
53
general prison population (and mainstream society) from the IMU The more time a person spends in solitary confinement the more difficult their transition back into the general prison population Importantly our analyses of rates of IMU placement in DOC (discussed in particular in the first findings section of this report on patterns in restrictive housing use) suggest that (1) large numbers of prisoners experience IMU placements during their stay in DOC and (2) many prisoners cycle in and out of the IMU This suggests that these long -term effects of IMU placements may be common if not pervasive among DOC prisoners
In sum prisoners described and sta ff observed common challenges transitioning from the IMU back into the general prison population or back onto the streets Still those prisoners who had spent extended periods of time (years rather than months) in the IMU but who were ulti mately able to transition back into the gene ral prison populati on descr ibed significantly impr oved quality of life and well-being in their new surroundings
For instance our team interviewed one prisoner who spent a total of one year in the IM U When our team re -interviewed this prisone r i n 2018 he was at a camp at the lowest security level in the system grateful for his ldquofreedom rdquo back in communication with his family and feeling ready for his looming release date (within the year of the interview ) ldquoEverythingrsquos turned around real fast from being in the cell to just being almost like out in the world Theyre just letting you know that Im getting closer and closer to finally getting outrdquo Our team interviewed another prisoner who spent a total of two years in the IMU during which time he had no contact with his family and had engaged in repeated serious self-harm resulting in multiple surgeries When our team re -interviewed this prisoner in 2018 he was living in the general prison population with a cellmate had re -established a relationship with his young daughter While prisoners face ongoing mental
and her mother and had not engaged in self-harm health needs following IMU stays
in months many also appreciate increased family connections exhibit better behavior
In many cases prisoners pointed to a specific staff and experience overall improvements member who had gotten to know them expressed in well-being after leaving the IMU concern for their well-being and advocated for targeted interventions like family contact or transitional programs to facilitate transitioning out of the IMU Such targeted individualized treatment interventions often coordinated by Program Managers at the institution- level or the Mission Housing Administrator from
Law and P sychiatry 8(1) 49-65 Haney C amp Lynch M (1997) Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and so litary c onfinement New York Review of Law and Social Change 23 101-195
54
headquarters were critical to intervening to get some of the longer-term IMU prisoners back into the general prison population For instance one Program Manager said
I follow up with all of my offenders When they leave and go to the other institution after theyrsquove been out of here for three months Irsquoll go and visit them at their other institutions and see how theyrsquore doing Wersquove had a couple thatrsquove gone through the program twice and a lot of people are looked down on that and go lsquoOh if they didnrsquot learn the first time why is he going to learn a second timersquo Well hey it might take somebody four or five times before they get it Especially if theyrsquore between that 28 to 38 age range
Likewise the Mission Housing Administrator who follows individual maximum-custody IMU placements throughout the entire Washington DOC system noted ldquoWe have hundreds of success stories of people who have gotten out of IMUsrdquo He said he ldquoget(s) calls from moms every once in awhilerdquo thanking him for giving their sons a chance by letting them out of the IMU And he added he has ldquoa drawer full of letters from people saying thank yourdquo
Such stories stand as important reminders that even prisoners once thought to be unmanageable can improve outside of the IMU and learn to thrive in our communities even in spite of the many documented mental health challenges associated with having spent time in solitary confinement
EPILOGUE ONGOING REFORMS 2018-2021
While data collection for this research project formally concluded in 2018 reform efforts within Washington DOC continued The Mission Housing Administrator continued to oversee all cases of long-term maximum custody IMU placements and to develop individualized interventions ndash from regular phone calls and exchanges of letters to facilitating more family contact ndash to assist in transitioning people out of the IMU Between 2018 and 2020 Washington DOC partnered with the Vera Institute of Justice to pursue further restrictive housing reform (and also joined a partnership with AMEND to improve overall correctional culture)20 In 2021 Vera Institute reported that overall restrictive housing use decreased by nearly ten percent between 2018
20 See PRESS RELEASE The Washington State Department of Corrections Partners with the Vera Institute to Focus on Restricted Housing Reforms May 16 2019 httpswwwdocwagovnews201905162019phtm
55
and 2020 and average and medium lengths of stay in IMU on maximum custody status decreased significantly by 18 and 33 percent respectively 21
Although the onset of COVID in early 2020 set som e of Washington DOC continues these restrictive housing reduction efforts back Washingt on to develop and implement DOC continues to implement additional reforms designed to strategies to reduce reliance
(1) further reduce reliance on restrictive housing on restrictive housing and (eliminating the sanction of disciplinary segregation improve conditions of shortening the maximum time in administrative segregation confinement in IMUs from 47 to 30 days implementing ldquoearned time creditsrdquo for
people assigned to maximum custody and piloting new hearings processes to divert ser iously mentally ill prisoners from restrictive housing ) and (2) improve conditions of confinement within restrictive housing units (increasing out- of-cell time implementing plans to t rack these increases through a program called Pipe permitting a broader range of visitors beyond immediate family and notifying emergency contacts when prisoners are placed in restrictive housing) In addition to these reforms Washington DOC has been and plans to continue ldquore -purposingrdquo IMU units for other less restrictive ldquomissionsrdquo like ldquosafe harborrdquo units for gang dropouts transition units for people moving between IMU and general population and a potential unit for people with traumatic brain injur ies As the Mission Housing Administrator said ldquowe are trying to take r estrictive housing beds away so they canrsquo t be filledrdquo 22
DOC has also been working to address IMU staff concerns DOC established a Steering Committee in 2018 including line staff m ental health professionals and correctional managers to help to develop and implement IMU -related policies By including line staff t his Committee directly addresses staff desi res documented in this repor t to be hear d and to have more input in IMU -related policy decisions In addition DOC developed a training handbook especially for IMU staff and now requires staff with IMU posts to complete a training program associated with this handbook within 6 months of beginning work in an IMU In sum DOC has
21 Rachel Friedrich ldquoWashington Corrections Continues Restrictive Housing Reformsrdquo Oct 28 2020 httpswwwdocwagovnews202010282020htm see a lso Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author)
22 See Vera Institute of Justice Safe Prisons Safe Communities From Isolation to Dignity and Wellness Behind Bars Closing Memo ndash December 2020 (on file with author) conversation with Tim Thrasher Feb 19 2021 (notes on file with author)
56
laid a strong groundwork from which to continue to implement many of the recommendations identified in the executive summary to this report
57
APPENDICES
A CLASSIFICATION OF DOC PRISONER CONFINEMENT STATUS ON INDEX DATES BY LOCATION AND CUSTODY LEVEL
Legend 5 MaxIMU 4 OthIMU 3 Max SOUITP 2 Max Other
1 GP 0 UNK
IMU SOU CBCC OTH FIELD UNK PRISON
4 MAX 5 3 3 2 0 0
CUSTODY 3 CLO 4 1 1 1 1 1
LEVEL 2 MED 4 1 1 1 1 1
1 OTH 4 1 1 1 1 1
0 UNK 4 0 0 0 0 0
G17 Custody Population by Index Location and Custody Level
IMU SOU CBCC OTH PRISN FIELD UNK TOTALS
4 MAX 342 30 22 18 0 0 412
CUSTODY 3 CLO 77 56 400 988 32 0 1553
LEVEL 2 MED 103 74 43 3441 43 0 3704
1 OTH 69 149 16 10811 550 0 11595
0 UNK 12 0 0 470 146 51 679
TOTALS 603 309 481 15728 771 51 17943
58
B ESTIMATES OF RESTRICTIVE HOUSING CAPACITY 1999-2020
1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020
Local RH Units AHCC
CRCC
TRU
WCCW
WSR-3a
WSR-3
WSP-4
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
72
80
101
64
0
40
40
0
80
101
64
0
0
40
0
80
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
101
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
100
0
40
0
0
0
32
0
0
40
0
0
0
Local RH Units Total
397 397 325 285 273 172 172 142
IMUs (Ad Seg Beds) CBCC-IMU
MCC-IMU
MICC-IMU
SCCC-IMU
WCC-IMU
WSP-IMU (N)
WSP-IMU (S)
CRCC IMU
124(62)
0
64(0)
0
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
0
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
0
0
124(62)
100(100)
64(0)
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(100)
0
96(48)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
0
124(62)
100(0)
0
96(0)
124(62)
96(0)
200(100)
100(70)
IMUs Total 408 552 552 952 888 888 740 770
Sum Local RH + IMUs
805 949 877 1237 1163 1060 912 912
59
C JUSTICE QUARTERLY ARTICLE
See next page
60
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher-Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Journal Justice Quarterly
Manuscript ID RJQY-2020-0181R2
Manuscript Type Original Article
Keywords Restrictive housing Solitary confinement Gangs Prison
The Version of Record of this manuscript has been published and is available in Justice Quarterly published online Dec 21 2020 httpsdoiorg1010800741882520201853800
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
Page 1 of 29 Justice QuarterlyTable 1 Washington DOC Population Characteristics 2002-2017
Cohort 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017
Age at Snapshot (in Years) 18 to 25 21 19 17 16 13 11 26 to 35 33 33 32 34 35 34 36 to 45 29 29 28 25 26 27 Over 45 17 20 23 25 27 28
Gender Female 7 8 8 8 8 8
Male 93 92 92 93 92 92 RaceEthnicity
White Non-Hispanic 60 63 62 60 61 60 Black Non-Hispanic 21 19 19 19 18 18
Hispanic 12 10 11 12 13 14 OtherUnknown 7 8 9 9 9 9
Most Serious Offense at Conviction Violent Non-Sex 41 42 44 46 46 48
Sex 17 17 20 20 20 19 Property 15 17 18 19 20 19
DrugOther 25 23 18 15 14 13 Missing 2 1 0 0 0 0
Sentence Length (in Months) Mean 879 891 948 998 1017 1009
Standard Deviation 1048 1071 1121 1173 1204 1246 Gang Affiliation by RacialEthnic STG
White 5 5 6 6 5 5 Black 9 9 9 10 10 10
Hispanic 4 5 6 8 9 9 Other 1 1 2 2 2 2
No Gang Affiliation 81 80 78 75 74 74
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17308 17288 17625 17943 Source Authorsrsquo Calculations Washington State Department of Corrections
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
For Peer ReviewOnly
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
350
Justice Quarterly Page 2 of 29
Figure 1 Percentage Change in IMU-Max Population IMU-Max Length of Stay (LOS) and Total Prison Population (Indexed at 2002) Washington DOC 2002-2017
100
150
200
250
300
Perc
enta
ge C
hang
e fr
om 2
002
50
0 2002
(=100) 2005 2008
Snapshot Year 2011 2014 2017
IMU-Max Population IMU-Max LOS Total Prison Population
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
48495051525354555657585960
1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647
Page 3 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Table 2 Solitary Confinement in Washington State 2002-2017
2002 Num
Custody amp Confinement Level IMU-Max 149 09
IMU-AdDSeg 105 07 Max-Tx 18 01
Other-Max 34 02 General Population 15499 974
Out of StateUnknown 102 06
2005 Num
228 14 144 09 50 03 55 03
16270 965 105 06
Cohort 2008 2011
Num Num
338 20 472 27 337 19 177 10 44 03 35 02 11 01 27 02
16438 950 16440 951 140 08 137 08
2014 Num
283 16 291 17 42 02 20 01
16893 958 96 05
2017 Num
342 19 260 14 52 03 18 01
17121 954 150 08
Total IMU Total Maximum Custody
254 201
16 13
372 333
22 20
675 393
39 23
649 534
38 31
574 345
33 20
602 412
34 23
Cumulative Days Spent in IMU (Any Custody Status)dagger
Mean (St Dev) 431 (2115) 476 (2303) 562 (2568) 746 (3027) 804 (3271) 824 (3300)
Not placed in IMU 1-45 days
46-90 days 91-365 days
366 days or more (gt1 year) At least 1 day in IMU
12062 2128 499 728 490
3845
758 134 31 46 31 242
12673 2344 487 755 593
4179
752 139 29 45 35 248
12533 2606 583 890 695
4774
724 151 34 51 40 276
12120 2535 610
1041 981
5167
701 147 35 60 57 299
11863 2854 810
1050 1048 5762
673 162 46 60 59 327
11847 2985 928
1075 1108 6096
660 166 52 60 62 340
Days in IMU by Custody and Confinement Level Mean (St Dev)
IMU-Max IMU-AdDSeg
2270 1147
(1362) (1246)
3060 1169
(2392) (1212)
2839 906
(1929) (1169)
3477 1278
(2732) (1385)
3258 664
(3167) (779)
2140 709
(1296) (796)
Total Prison Population 15907 16852 17307 17287 17625 17943
Source Authorsrsquo calculations Washington State Department of Corrections Changes in the use of local segregation for disciplinary and administrative purposes (outside of IMUs for prisoners classified lower than Max Custody) likely affect the counts of IMU-AdDSeg populations particularly in early cohort years Total IMU is the sum of all prisoners living in IMU units on July 1st including (i) IMU-Max those on maximum custody housed in IMUs and (ii) IMU-AdDSeg those who are housed in IMUs on lower custody levels including administrative segregation disciplinary segregation and awaiting hearings Total Maximum Custody consists of three groups all classified as maximum custody (i) those housed in IMUs (IMU-Max) (ii) those in SOU or ITP units (Max-Tx) and (iii) those located elsewhere (Other-Max) dagger Days spent in IMU represents cumulative days spent in IMU until the snapshot date for all prisoners regardless of custody classification during their current prison admission
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Justice Quarterly Page 4 of 29Table 3 Comparison of IMU-Max and General Prison Populations Washington DOC 2002-2017
Cohort 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2 IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen IMU- Gen 3 Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop Max Pop4
Background Characteristics 6 Age at Snapshot (Years) 7 18 to 25 36 21 24 19 31 16 24 15 19 13 20 11 8 9
26 to 35 36 to 45
40 17
33 29
40 22
32 29
43 15
32 29
45 18
34 26
41 20
34 26
47 20
34 27
11 Over 45 7 17 13 20 12 23 13 25 19 27 13 29 12 RaceEthnicity13 14
Black Non-Hispanic Hispanic
19 20
21 11
16 22
19 10
15 30
19 10
20 29
19 12
14 37
18 12
17 27
18 13
16 OtherUnknown 13 7 8 8 6 9 7 9 5 9 9 9 17 White Non-Hispanic 48 60 55 63 49 62 44 61 44 62 47 60 18 Most Serious Offense at 19 Conviction
21 22
Violent Non-Sex Sex
68 15
41 17
66 14
42 17
70 9
43 20
74 11
45 21
78 8
45 20
75 7
48 20
23 Property 8 16 10 17 14 19 11 19 10 20 11 20 24 DrugOther 9 25 9 23 7 18 4 16 4 14 7 13
Missing26 Age of First Conviction
1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 (Years)28 29 Under 18
18 to 25
12 69
4 45
9 69
3 45
10 69
3 45
10 65
3 46
8 67
3 46
8 69
3 45
31 Over 25 20 51 22 52 21 52 25 51 25 51 23 52 32 In-Prison Behavioral Profile 33 Gang Affiliation by34 RacialEthnic STG
36 37
White Black
14 22
4 9
21 14
5 9
20 12
5 9
15 14
5 10
15 11
5 10
14 16
4 10
38 Hispanic 21 4 22 4 39 5 33 7 40 8 32 8 39 Other 3 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 4 2 4 2
41 No Gang Affiliation 40 81 43 81 28 79 36 76 31 75 33 76
42 Annual Infraction Rate 43 44 Mean 83 13 51 11 53 11 42 10 47 10 49 11
St Dev 76 24 78 18 54 20 49 17 59 18 67 19 46 Violent Infractions 47 48 Mean 40 05 33 04 33 05 30 05 33 05 30 05
49 St Dev 58 15 45 14 42 15 40 16 43 16 34 16 Staff Assaults
51 52 53
Mean St Dev
12 33
01 04
07 22
00 04
07 20
00 04
07 21
01 05
08 25
01 05
06 20
01 05
54 Total Population 149 15499 228 16270 338 16438 472 16440 283 16893 342 17121
56 Source Authors calculations Washington State Department of Corrections 57 Statistically significant differences between IMU-Max and General Population (Gen Pop) at plt001 (for categorical chi square for 58 numeric t-test) 59
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 5 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Opening the Black Box of Solitary Confinement through Researcher -Practitioner Collaboration
A Longitudinal Analysis of Prisoner and Solitary Populations in Washington State 2002-17
Abstract This article presents a rare longitudinal analysis of solitary confinement use in one state prison system spanning 2002-2017 in the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) An ongoing partnership with DOC officials facilitated methodological and conceptual improvements allowing us to construct a dataset that provides a rich description of who is in solitary confinement for how long and why Operationalizing solitary confinement as the intersection of the most serious custody status with the most restrictive housing location we describe significant changes in ethnic composition and behavioral profiles of people in solitary confinement and in frequency and duration of solitary confinement use These results suggest how particular policy interventions have affected the composition numbers and lengths of stay in solitary confinement Combining longitudinal analysis and iterative engagement with DOC officials we provide a roadmap for better understanding solitary confinement use in the United States now and in the future
Tens of thousands of prisoners across the United States experience solitary confinement
annually (ASCA-Liman 2015 2018 Beck 2015) Prisoners generally spend no more than an
hour per day outside of cells the size of a wheelchair-accessible bathroom stall and eat cold
meals alone with limited access to natural light phones family visits or any human touch
Prisoners live not days but months and years under such conditions In tandem with mass
incarceration the use of solitary confinement expanded drastically across the United States in the
1980s and 1990s often in modern hyper-secure ldquosupermaxrdquo facilities (Reiter 2016 Riveland
1999 Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Though integral to incarceration since the prison was ldquobornrdquo and
perpetually controversial (Foucault 1977 Haney amp Lynch 1997 Smith 2006 Rubin amp Reiter
2018) solitary confinement has come under renewed scrutiny in the last decade (Reiter 2018
ASCA-Liman 2015) Federal and state correctional systems have begun to experiment with
mitigation and alternative programs Here we focus on a 15-year period during which the
Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) attempted to confront these issues and ask
whether and how a prison system might reduce its use of solitary confinement
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Justice Quarterly Page 6 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
The question of whether a prison system might change direction including how the
practice of solitary confinement might be constrained has animated criminological scholarship
over decades (eg Jacobs 1977 Liebling 1999 Petersilia 1991 Rhodes 2004 Reiter 2016
Rubin amp Reiter 2018) A longitudinal quantitative dataset with which to assess these questions
however is rare Our dataset analyzed in collaboration with practitioner partners allows us to
look both at individual faFor Peer Review Only ctors such as how many gang members with violent infraction histories
are placed in solitary confinement for how long in any given year and at institutional factors
including demographic shifts and policy changes which influence behavioral patterns (Toch
1977 Liebling 1999 Toch amp Adams 1989 Haney 2018)
Where scholars have used point-in-time datasets to examine the relationship between
individual and institutional factors in understanding the use and effects of solitary confinement
controversies abound over how to define and operationalize the practice (Kurki amp Morris 2001
Naday et al 2008 Mears et al 2019 Reiter 2016) We identify which prisoners are subjected
to the aversive conditions described above in terms of two factors 1) whether they are living in
units engineered to lock them down (location) and 2) the rules governing how long they stay
their conditions of confinement and movement (custody status) Here these measurement
principles are applied to a rich administrative dataset to ask 1 Who is in solitary confinement
for how long and why 2 How if at all do their individual characteristics including ethnicity
gang status and b ehavioral profiles change over time 3 What patterns emerge from this
analysis We show how the distribution and extent of solitary confinement use in Washington
has shifted with institutional vicissitudes in demographics capacity gang management policies
programming and classification systems
Trajectories of Solitary Confinement Placement
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Page 7 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Estimates of how many people experience solitary confinement annually range from
68000 prisoners to 18 of all prisoners in the United States or over 250000 people (ASCA-
Liman 2015 Beck 2015) To address definitional debates underlying conflicting estimates
Mears et al recently suggested a four-dimensional conceptual framework ndash goal duration
quality and intentionality ndash to describe the constellation of factors that make up solitary
confinement (or ldquorestric
o define solitary confinement a
conceptually and et
For Peer Review Only tive housingrdquo) practices (2019 1434) The operational focus of our
alternative approach allows us to bypass arguments about how t
hically controversial practice Rather our operational definition applies the
near-universal correctional functions of classification and movement to identify the sites and
subjects of solitary confinement from correctional tracking records These methods permit
consistent robust a nalyses of who is subjected to solitary confinement and the association of this
experience with institutional misconduct and other factors
Previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions about whether solitary confinement
has a disparate impact on groups defined by race or ethnicity Studies focusing on patterns in
disciplinary infractions and solitary confinement placements over four to six years tend to find
minimal disparities (Cochran et al 2018 Tasca amp Turanovic 2018) while point-in-time
comparisons of demographics of solitary confinement units with general population units
consistently find non-white prisoners over-represented in solitary confinement (Schlanger 2012
Reiter 2012) A recent study analyzed a survey that asked state prison systems to self-report
solitary confinement and gang-affiliated populations prisoners classified as gang members were
over-represented in solitary confinement across the United States (Pyrooz amp Mitchell 2019)
The study does not m ention race but others have noted the longstanding ties between race and
gangs in US prisons (Berger 2014 Bloom amp Martin 2013 Reiter 2016) strengthening Pyrooz
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Justice Quarterly Page 8 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and Mitchellrsquos recommendation to ldquointegrate measures of gang affiliation into correctional
researchrdquo (2019 22) as we do in our analysis
The relationship between solitary confinement and institutional order is also contested (eg
Briggs Sundt and Castellano 2003 Lovell Johnson amp Cain 2007) One recent study among
men in a three-year cohort in a mid-western DOC found that disciplinary segregation was
associated with a greater probability of misconduct (Labrecque amp Smith 2019) but another
study among men in a two-year cohort in the Oregon DOC found that disciplinary segregation
was not a significant predictor of subsequent institutional misconduct (Lucas amp Jones 2017)
Our dataset permits an evaluation of longer-term patterns of misconduct in and out of solitary
settings
One recent study expanded the usual short periods of analysis described in preceding studies
about both race and misconduct using nearly a decade (1987-96) of data from Kansas a prison
system small enough (5-7000 prisoners) to allow tracing of bed-level data to examine individual
correlates of solitary confinement placement such as race and also patterns in frequency and
duration of solitary confinement over time (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) Our study takes an even
broader scale approach examining populations in and out of solitary confinement over 15 years
with 15000 or more prisoners per cohort following particular individuals and groups over
decades of criminal and correctional history
Attending to broader institutional forces at play over our study period is critical to our
approach Lynch recently argued that in studies of sentencing findings are often
ldquooperationalized as a single end-stage outcome that is unmoored from the social organizational
and institutional forces that help produce a class of defendants to be sentencedrdquo (2020 1159)
This critique could just as readily be applied to studies of solitary confinement (eg Cochran et
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Page 9 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
al 2018 Logan et al 2017) in which disparities in outcomes and differences in personal and
behavioral characteristics of prisoners are analyzed with limited attention to institutional patterns
such as fluctuations in bed capacity shifts in demographic make-up and reforms or
retrenchments in policies governing solitary confinement placement and release Our
longitudinal dataset allows us to generate individual-level and aggregate statistics on histories
and outcomes during incarceration and to place findings in the context of broader institutional
forces shaping those patterns
The administrative dataset analyzed here was collected as part of a multi-method project also
using ethnographic interview and archival data to evaluate solitary confinement use over time
in Washington (DOC) (Reiter et al 2020) This project extends a decades-long collaborative
relationship between researchers and DOC first between the University of Washington (UW)
and DOC through the Mental Health Collaboration (Allen et al 2001) later in a UW-led multi-
method systematic survey of Washingtonrsquos solitary confinement population in 1999-2000
(Lovell et al 2000 Rhodes 2004 Lovell 2008) and finally in this study replicating and
extending the 2000 study in collaboration with an original member of both previous studies
In rates of overall incarceration and solitary confinement use Washington DOC is below
average it has the 12th lowest rate of incarceration among the states (Kaeble amp Cowhig 2018)
and as of 2018 its reported proportion of population in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo (23) was half the
national average (45) (ASCA-Liman 2018 13)1 In terms of willingness to collaborate with
researchers however Washington DOC is above average current and former DOC leadership
have agreed there are knowledge gaps around solitary confinement invited scholars and
advocates alike to analyze and critique policies in order to address these gaps and participated
actively in collaborations both facilitating access to the administrative data underlying the
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Justice Quarterly Page 10 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
analyses presented here and helping to interpret results In particular Eldon Vail and Dan
Pacholke nationally recognized correctional policy experts led Washington DOC during part of
our study period and consulted with us on interpretation of findings
Research about solitary confinement use has been produced through practitioner-researcher
collaborations in a number of states including Colorado (OrsquoKeefe et al 2011) Florida (Mears
amp Bales 2009) Kansas (Sakoda amp Simes 2019) and Oregon (Pyrooz et al 2020) Few
however have attempted the quantitative and qualitative depth of this project which is more
comparable to the New York studies of Toch and colleagues (eg Toch amp Adams 1989 Toch
1977) conducted as the new ldquosupermaxrdquo era was coming upon us in the 1980s or the California
studies by Petersilia on re-entry and community supervision (eg Petersilia 2009) Ours
represents an intergenerational academic-practitioner collaboration spanning both eras
Data and Methods
This analysis draws on a longitudinal administrative record set of the entire DOC
population on six evenly-spaced snapshot intervals (July 1 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 and
2017) subject-level demographic records (N=57130) and event-level records of admissions and
releases (266266) prison sentences (230833) custody assignments (12 million) infractions
(630088) and inter-facility movements (24 million) Discussions with DOC research office
partners about how best to meet the data needs of our study exemplifying our academic-
practitioner collaboration led to two major expansions of the scope and power of this dataset
First to assess how solitary confinement populations had changed since the 2000 UW study
we requested archival information on prisoners in any form of solitary confinement on our
snapshot dates Lacking ready capacity to identify these prisoners DOC offered to provide data
for all prisoners in custody on these dates leaving it to us to identify who was in solitary
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Page 11 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
confinement and when Our willingness to pick our own apples from the DOC data tree led to a
30-fold expansion of our subject pool permitting longitudinal comparisons between solitary
confinement and general population prisoners Second DOC provided us all Washington prison
sentences in the entire history of prisoners in our vastly expanded dataset rather than only the
index offense data we had requested Although information about currently active convictions
accompanies prisoners as they move through DOC retrospectively retrieving links between court
and correctional records is complicated by the multiplicity of charges sentencing policies and
admission statuses that may apply Recognizing a systematic problem when we showed them a
pattern of missing data DOC provided the entire prison conviction history for the 57000 prisoners
in our expanded subject population allowing us both to identify the most serious current offense
and to provide a consistent measure of prisonersrsquo criminal histories
Source data were compiled cohort by cohort applying uniform coding procedures to
compile event-level data into a subject-level dataset We computed the facility location and
custody status of every prisoner in the system throughout each admission length of stay (LOS) at
each location and subject-level summaries of numbers and rates of relevant events such as
infractions Compilation codes were tested and modified until they yielded consistent and
plausible counts and summary statistics (eg no negative values for LOS or rates) across all
prisoners in six snapshot cohorts We also use some inferential statistics (eg chi-square and t-
tests) in the analyses we present to test for differences across cohorts and groups
Terminology In Washington DOC policy (2020 320250) maximum custody status is the
highest level of custody classification Maximum custody prisoners are assessed in formal
hearings to pose a sufficient risk to safety ndash whether their own or others ndash to warrant holding
them for an extended period in a maximum-security location isolated by architecture procedure
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Justice Quarterly Page 12 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
and staffing As legal expert Fred Cohen notes maximum custody is a risk-based classification
justified as a preventive measure rather than a punitive sanction (2008) In Washington DOC
prisoners first enter solitary confinement through short-term administrative segregation (Ad-
Seg) placements usually awaiting adjudication following an infraction Infraction of a specific
prison rule may result in a disciplinary hearing and the sanction of a disciplinary segregation (D-
Seg) placement Alternatively multiple infractions other behavior patterns or an extended stay
in administrative segregation may lead to a re-classification as maximum custody (Max)
In DOC Intensive Management Units (IMUs) are the most secure housing facilities The
term ldquosupermaxrdquo is not a category of institution in DOC instead the state has five IMUs located
at Clallam Bay Corrections Center (CC) Monroe CC Washington CC (ldquoSheltonrdquo) Stafford
Creek CC and the Washington State Penitentiary (called Walla Walla or the ldquoconcrete mamardquo
(Hoffman amp McCoy 2018)) IMUs feature distinct security perimeters with advanced
technology for controlling entrances gates and doors strict procedures for prisoner movement
and no normal occasions for prisoners to share space with others unless shackled Though exact
conditions (like cell size and degree of access to natural light) vary across IMUs the uniformly
restrictive conditions impose intense isolation (often for extended periods of time) comparable to
conditions in other state supermaxes IMUs are adjacent to the ldquomain institutionrdquo (a correctional
center or complex may have multiple facilities or stand-alone buildings sharing a common
Superintendent) to allow escorting prisoners on foot without delay As a Lieutenant at Shelton
said during a prison visit ldquoNothing happens fast around here except going to the IMUrdquo
Transfers between facilities are recorded in DOCrsquos movement records allowing us to
identify who was placed in IMUs and for how long Transfers in and out of cells within a facility
however are recorded as housing changes likely 50 million in number for our subjects vastly
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Page 13 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
exceeding our and DOCrsquos ability to retrieve and compile absent unlimited resources2 Therefore
inter-facility movement records in our data do not capture prisoners isolated on Ad-Seg or D-Seg
status (AdDSeg status) inside a main institution Importantly AdDSeg prisoners who were
living under comparably stringent conditions as IMU-Max prisoners in two decrepit segregation
units within the main institutions at two of Washingtonrsquos oldest prisons ndash Walla Walla and
Monroe ndash are not captured in our data These two units with a combined capacity of 250 closed
in 2011 but were replaced (and then some) by 200 new IMU beds at each prison Our inability
to identify all such AdDSeg prisoners through movement records requires caution in how the
terms ldquoIMUrdquo versus ldquosolitary confinementrdquo are used in our findings Because of this limitation
we center our trend and comparative analyses on the maximum custody group who are reliably
identified over the entire course of our study period and whose long-term presence in maximum
security settings raises the sharpest ethical issues (Lovell 2014)
Results
To contextualize findings on the size and characteristics of Washingtonrsquos solitary
confinement population we first describe overall patterns in the state prison population between
2002 and 2017 Table 1 displays counts and demographic crime type sentence length and gang
affiliation characteristics for the entire prison population incarcerated on each of the six snapshot
dates Washington Statersquos prison population grew by 13 despite changes in sentencing policy
(SHB2338 2002) that were expected to reduce imprisonment by lessening penalties and
providing treatment alternatives for drug-related offenses The proportion of prisoners
incarcerated for drug or other offenses declined substantially while those incarcerated for
violent non-sexual offenses increased by nearly 17 between 2002 and 2017 (plt001)3
Reflecting the shift toward more violent offenses average sentence lengths increased
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Justice Quarterly Page 14 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
significantly as did the average age of prisoners The proportion of Hispanic prisoners increased
by 17 while the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners decreased by 16 (plt001) and
White non-Hispanic representation remained stable4
Affiliation with security threat groups (STG) or prison gangs increased as well in 2017
over one in four prisoners (26) was identified as a member of an STG up from 19 in 2002
The growth of gang affiliation was not equally distributed across racial and ethnic groups5
While rates of gang affiliation for White non-Hispanic prisoners remained relatively low over
the fifteen-year period gang affiliation among prisoners of color increased substantially
between 2002 and 2017 the proportion of Black non-Hispanic prisoners classified as gang-
affiliated rose from 35 to 41 for Hispanic prisoners from 28 to 53 a sharp increase with
substantial consequences for solitary confinement practices
[TABLE 1 NEAR HERE]
Disentangling the Solitary Population Table 2 presents trends in solitary confinement use by
both custody status (classification) and location (facility) We distinguish four groups either
classified at the highest custody level (Maximum labeled ldquoMaxrdquo) or located in the most
restrictive locations (IMUs) At the center of our analysis are prisoners both classified Max and
housed in IMUs (denoted by IMU-Max) Next are prisoners who have not been reclassified
Max but are housed in IMUs for administrative or disciplinary segregation (IMU-AdDSeg)
Third for treatment purposes some Max prisoners are housed at the Special Offender Unit
(SOU) at Monroe designed to address serious behavioral health needs or at the Inmate
Transitional Pod (ITP) at Clallam Bay a program-focused unit for prisoners transitioning out of
solitary confinement (denoted by Max-Tx) Finally a residual group of Max prisoners could not
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Page 15 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
For Peer Review Only
be assigned a facility type because on the snapshot date they were on hospital or court release
or awaiting transfers to an IMU SOU or ITP (Other-Max)6
Solitary confinement use (in IMU-Max IMU-AdDseg and Total IMU) far outpaces
population growth over our study period in the state growing at least 130 (in IMU-Max)
compared to a 13 growth in the state prison population As explained earlier IMU-Max
represents a clearly defined population with reliable snapshot counts for prisoners subjected to
long-term solitary confinement over the entire study period but it excludes prisoners in AdDSeg
either in the IMU or in other within-facility units not identifiable in the between-facility
movement records we analyze Figure 1 illustrates differences in rates and patterns of growth in
IMU-Max and total prison populations accompanied by changes in average length of stay (LOS)
for the IMU-Max group on their snapshot date assignments
[TABLE 2 amp FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE]
One-day counts capture those physically held in IMUs on snapshot dates and demonstrate
that a small but increasing proportion of Washingtonrsquos prison population was held in solitary
confinement across snapshots in both IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg groups One-day counts
however do not account for movement in and out of IMUs at other points To better understand
both the prevalence and duration of placement in solitary we used event-level movement
information to calculate the cumulative amount of time each prisoner spent in solitary
confinement from admission to snapshot date Over the study period a majority of prisoners in
DOC in each snapshot cohort were never placed in solitary confinement but a substantial and
growing proportion of prisoners had spent time in these units The proportion of prisoners
spending at least one day in an IMU between their prison admission and snapshot dates had
increased from 242 in 2002 to 34 in 2017 Prisoners in 2002 spent an average of 6 weeks in
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Justice Quarterly Page 16 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
IMUs from admission to snapshot by 2017 time spent in IMU increased significantly to an
average of 12 weeks (plt001) Changes in mean values are skewed by a few outliers who have
spent their entire (long or life) prison sentences in an IMU beginning decades before and
extending through the study period To counter the skew we binned cumulative days in IMU
into distinct groups 0 days 1-45 days 46-90 days 91 days to 1 year and over 1 year7
Pooling across all cohorts we find that more than half of those who spent at least one day in
an IMU stayed for between 1 and 45 days cumulatively The second largest group (186)
cumulatively spent between three months and one year in solitary confinement and a substantial
proportion (165) of those placed in an IMU spent more than one year there The changing
distribution of cumulative time spent in IMUs reinforces the finding that average time spent in
solitary increased over the study period More prisoners spent at least one day in IMU and
proportions of prisoners in each cumulative length of stay group increased substantially led by
those spending between 46 and 90 days and those spending more than one year in IMU In total
our data demonstrate a greater prevalence of IMU placement across the population over time
and an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs8
In addition to examining cumulative days spent in IMU for the full prison population we
also calculated mean lengths of stay (LOS) in IMUs for both the IMU-Max and IMU-AdDSeg
groups9 Both groups spent substantial amounts of time in IMU settings although as expected
those in IMU-Max had markedly longer stays in IMU than the IMU-AdDSeg group Across the
study period average time in IMU-Max ranged from 7 to 12 months compared to 2 to 4 months
for the IMU-AdDSeg group The mean LOS for IMU-Max fluctuated generally increasing
until 2011 followed by a decline through 2017 to a level just below the mean LOS in 2002
(Figure 1) For the IMU-AdDSeg group mean LOS dropped even more substantially after
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Page 17 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
2011 Changes in average LOS for both groups were a factor in periods of growth in total IMU
populations prior to 2008 as well as in declines of IMU populations after 2011
The Maximum Custody IMU Population Table 3 compares demographic criminal history gang
status and behavioral histories of IMU-Max and general population (GP) prisoners across
snapshots10 showing significant differences between these groups In both populations White
non-Hispanic prisoners represented the largest group However compared to the GP prisoners
of Hispanic ethnicity were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max while White non-
Hispanic prisoners are under-represented (plt001) Black non-Hispanic people were slightly
under-represented among IMU-Max prisoners relative to their presence in the GP These
disparities diverge over time the proportion of Hispanic prisoners in the IMU-Max population
increased by nearly 34 between 2002 and 2017 while the proportions of all other racial and
ethnic groups decreased
[TABLE 3 ABOUT HERE]
IMU-Max prisoners have more serious conviction and in-prison misconduct histories
than GP prisoners Across cohorts nearly three-quarters (73) of IMU-Max prisoners were
convicted of non-sexual violent offenses compared with just 44 of GP prisoners The IMU-
Max group were also first convicted of prison-eligible offenses at a younger age on average
than those in the GP (plt001) Further in-prison misconduct rates were higher and more serious
for the IMU-Max group annual infraction rates for these prisoners were more than double GP
rates and IMU-Max prisoners committed far more violent infractions and staff assaults than
those in GP (plt001)11 Nevertheless serious misconduct appeared to decline substantially
across IMU-Max prisoner snapshots (but not for GP) with average annual infraction rates among
IMU-Max prisoners falling from 83 in 2002 to 49 in 2017 (plt001) average numbers of violent
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Justice Quarterly Page 18 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
infractions decreasing from 4 to 3 (plt05) and average numbers of staff assaults decreasing from
12 to 06 (plt05)
Gang members were substantially over-represented in IMU-Max compared to GP (66
to 22 pooled across all snapshot years) While the prevalence of gang membership grew in
both groups over time patterns of gang affiliation across racial-ethnic sub-categories behaved
differently within the IMU-Max and GP groups Among GP prisoners the proportion of those
affiliated with Hispanic gangs grew by 118 from 2002 to 2017 among IMU-Max prisoners
Hispanic gang membership grew substantially (55) but at a lower rate than in the GP Black
gang membership on the other hand grew by just 7 in the GP but fell by 24 among IMU-
Max prisoners Explaining these patterns is outside the scope of the present analysis but the
scale of divergence in patterns across both racial-ethnic sub-categories of gang affiliates and GP
and IMU-Max populations merits future attention
Discussion
Our findings draw on an especially robust dataset including (1) multiple individual
characteristics like gang status and infraction rates each one of which has constituted the sole
focus of previous analyses (2) snapshot data that covers both the entire prison population and
each individualrsquos entire criminal and incarceration history and (3) a fifteen-year period of
analysis over six snapshot dates a longer time period than in previous studies of solitary
confinement Such a rich dataset makes a succinct analysis of a subset of findings challenging to
present Here we focus on our analytic methods an overview of the characteristics of people in
and out of solitary confinement and overall patterns in solitary confinement use
First we measure the sites subjects and varieties of solitary confinement in terms of the
intersection of location and custody status This operational taxonomy along with the prisoner
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Page 19 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
characteristics associated with solitary confinement placements was achieved by developing an
extensive population analysis script that compiled a correctional dataset tracking events
movements and dispositions into an analytic dataset permitting analysis of patterns of prisoner
behavior and facility placements over time Our multi-generational researcher-practitioner
collaboration with Washington DOC facilitated both obtaining and interpreting this data In turn
we hope our operational taxonomy will facilitate more precise measurements of solitary
confinement use applicable and comparable across the vicissitudes of different correctional
systemsrsquo varied labels for security levels housing locations and solitary confinement practices
(eg Mears et al 2019)
Second we provide an overview and comparison of characteristics of people in solitary
confinement focusing on the specifically targeted IMU-Max group to provide a clear contrast to
general population prisoners Over time the average IMU-Max prisoner was increasingly likely
to be older Hispanic convicted of a violent offense and gang affiliated but decreasingly likely
to have assaulted a staff member Like Pyrooz amp Mitchell (2019) we find gang members over-
represented in solitary confinement relative to their representation in the general prison
population We also find that Hispanic prisoners are increasingly over-represented in solitary
confinement providing evidence of the racially disproportionate impact of solitary confinement
(eg Sakoda amp Simes 2019 Schlanger 2012 Reiter 2012) Our longitudinal analysis shows this
disproportion steadily increasing over time at a faster rate than gang membership in the general
prison system which increased only slightly over our period of analysis As in other studies
finding misconduct associated with solitary confinement placement (eg Labrecque amp Smith
2019) we find that prisoners in solitary confinement have significantly and consistently higher
annual infraction violent infraction and staff assault rates than general population prisoners
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Justice Quarterly Page 20 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
However all three measures of infractions despite remaining fairly stable throughout the
system generally declined in IMU-Max over time
Rendering population patterns visible also renders visible new questions about what
combination of individual behavior patterns and institutional policies produce the changes we
see Have IMU-Max prisoners become less violent and dangerous Have institutional policies
about identifying gang members and behavioral or affiliation criteria for max custody changed
When the UW solitary confinement study was conducted 20 years ago pioneering experiments
in relaxing the stringency of solitary confinement conditions and supporting prisoners in
changing course had begun at Shelton (Rhodes 2004) at that time Washington DOC leaders
justified IMUs as a necessary response to White Supremacist groups and IMU reforms focused
on mitigating organized attacks and challenges to correctional authority by these groups The late
2010s brought another round of reforms attempting to relax the stringent conditions of solitary
confinement this time factional rivalries among gang-affiliated Hispanic prisoners first justified
IMU placements and then became the focus of reform efforts (Warner et al 2014) This
relationship between shifts in prison population demographics behavior patterns and
correctional attention to specific sub-categories of gangs perceived as particularly dangerous
deserves further analysis but identifying the relevant trends as we do here is a first step
Third we see changing patterns in solitary confinement use over time Overall the
prevalence and duration of solitary confinement grew across Washingtonrsquos prison population
between 2002 and 2017 The raw numbers and rates of both Max custody status prisoners and
prisoners in IMU locations more than doubled from 2002 to 2017 And an increasing proportion
of people throughout the system experienced solitary confinement in 2017 more than 1 in 3
prisoners had spent at least a day in solitary compared to 1 in 4 in 2002 This trend echoes and
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Page 21 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
quantifies Sakoda amp Simesrsquo argument that solitary confinement is a ldquonormal event during
imprisonmentrdquo (2019 2) Although rates of solitary confinement use increased overall average
lengths of stay in solitary confinement (which peaked in 2011 in tandem with the peak years of
solitary confinement use in Washington) decreased By 2017 average lengths of stay on IMU-
Max and IMU-AdDSeg (along with the standard deviations) were the shortest they had been in
the state since 2002 This analysis reveals that Washington DOC had some success in reducing
its use of solitary confinement from peak levels and especially in shortening lengths of stay in
these conditions But what forces facilitated or constrained these reductions
The dramatic shifts we document in both numbers of people in solitary confinement and
durations of stays ndash without any associated dramatic shifts in the usually assumed behavioral
predictors of solitary confinement like overall institutional rates of gang membership or violent
infractions ndash suggest the influence of other institutional factors (cf Lynch 2020) While
additional analysis is needed we can thanks to our iterative conversations with DOC officials
suggest two institutional factors that influenced rates and durations of solitary confinement use
during periods of abrupt change bed capacity increases and local-level rehabilitative
programming changes
First between 2000 and 2008 while DOCrsquos expanding capacity was continually
outpaced by population growth (despite legislative changes intended to reduce imprisonment
WSIPP 2006) IMU capacity in Washington expanded by 520 beds Three years later in 2011
both IMU-Max counts and average LOS peaked Both then decreased in tandem with decreasing
IMU capacity down 212 beds as of 2017 as some units were re-purposed for other special
groups such as parole violators and managed with far less restrictive protocols While the
relationship between capacity IMU counts and length of stay deserves its own focused analysis
17 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
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For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 22 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
we have taken the first step by identifying relevant trends These findings suggest that
constraining capacity is likely a key to long-term reductions in solitary confinement along with
reducing lengths of stay and rate of assignments into maximum security settings like IMUs
Second between 2011 and 2014 Washington DOC built upon previous local initiatives
at Clallam Bay and Walla Walla IMUs embarking on an effort to ldquoreinvent what segregation can
berdquo partnering with Vera Institute of Justice eliminating some aversive disciplinary policies
and introducing facility-specific missions and group rehabilitative programming across IMUs
(Neyfakh 2015) Both the temporary drop in IMU-Max populations in 2014 and the more
sustained decreases in average lengths of stay for this population between 2011 and 2017 are tied
to these interventions
The correctional population analysis presented in this study exemplifies an approach to
research and collaboration suited to improving the ability of corrections systems to track changes
in prisoner characteristics lengths of stay and overall rates of placement in various forms of
solitary confinement Rendering such patterns visible strengthens researcher-practitioner
collaboration revealing in Washingtonrsquos case what is working ie sustained reductions in
lengths of solitary confinement stays and what is not working ie less sustained reductions in
rates of solitary confinement use By displaying institutional patterns our collaborative research
findings also suggest avenues of analysis to improve outcomes for prisoners and in prison
settings
MAIN TEXT WORD COUNT 6082
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 18
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 23 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
References
Allen DG Lovell DG amp Rhodes LA Correctional mental health a research agenda In JJ
Fitzpatrick PA White eds Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Research Digest New York
Springer pp 180-184
Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
Yale Law School (ASCA-Liman) (2015) Time-In-Cell The ASCA-Liman 2014 National
Survey of Administrative Segregation in Prison (Aug) Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca-
liman_administrativesegregationreportpdf
__ (2018) Reforming restrictive housing The 2018 ASCA-Liman nationwide survey of time-in-
cell Report issued by the Association of State Correctional Administrators (ASCA) amp the
Liman Center for Public Interest Law at Yale Law School Retrieved from
httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterlimandocumentasca_liman_2018_restrictiv
e_housing_released_oct_2018pdf
Beck A J (2015) Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 201112 Washington DC
Bureau of Justice Statistics Government Printing Office Retrieved from
httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112pdf
Berger D (2014) Captive Nation Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina Press
Bloom J and WE Martin (2013) Black Against Empire The History and Politics of the Black
Panther Party Berkeley University of California Press
Briggs CS JL Sundt and TC Castellano (2003) ldquoThe effect of supermaximum security
prisons on aggregate levels of institutional violencerdquo Criminology Vol 41 1341-1376
19 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 24 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Cochran JC E L Toman D P Mears amp W D Bales (2018) Solitary Confinement as
Punishment Examining In-Prison Sanctioning Disparities Justice Quarterly 35(3) 381-411
Cohen Fred 2008 Penal isolation beyond the seriously mentally ill Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 1017-1047
Foucault M (1977) Discipline and Punish The Birth of the Prison New York Pantheon Books
Haney Craig ldquoThe Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement A Systematic Critiquerdquo
Crime and Justice 47 no 1 (2018) pp 365-416
Haney C amp Lynch M 1997 Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of
supermax and solitary confinement NYU Review of Law amp Social Change 23 477ndash570
Hoffman E amp McCoy J 2018 Concrete Mama Prison Profiles from Walla Walla Seattle WA
University of Washington Press
Kaeble D Cowhig M (2018) Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121
US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018
Kurki L amp N Morris (2001) The Purposes Practices and Problems of Supermax Prisons Crime
and Justice 28 358-424
Labrecque R M amp Smith P (2019) Assessing the impact of time spent in restrictive housing
confinement on subsequent measures of institutional adjustment among men in prison Criminal
Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1445-1455
Liebling A (1999) ldquoDoing Research in Prison Breaking the Silencerdquo Theoretical Criminology
Vol 3147ndash73
Logan MW B Dulisse S Peterson MA Morgan TM Olma P Pareacute (2017) Correctional
shorthands Focal concerns and the decision to administer solitary confinement Journal of
Criminal Justice 52 90-100
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 20
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For Peer Review Only
Page 25 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Lucas J W amp Jones M A (2019) An analysis of the deterrent effects of disciplinary segregation
on institutional rule violation rates Criminal Justice Policy Review 30(5) 765-787
Lovell DG 2008 Patterns of disturbance in a supermax population Criminal Justice and
Behavior 35(8) 985-1004
Lovell DG (2014) Isolation Vignettes Practical applications of strict scrutiny The Correctional
Law Reporter 26(1) 3
Lovell DG Cloyes KC Allen DG amp Rhodes LA 2000 Who lives in super-maximum
custody A Washington State study Federal Probation 64(2) 33-38
Lovell DG C Johnson KC Cain 2007 Recidivism of Supermax Prisoners in Washington
State Crime and Delinquency 53(4) 633-56
Lynch M (2019) Focally Concerned About Focal Concerns A Conceptual and Methodological
Critique of Sentencing Disparities Research Justice Quarterly 36(7) 1148-1175
Mears D P Hughes V Pesta G B Bales W D Brown J M Cochran J C amp Wooldredge
J (2019) The new solitary confinement A conceptual framework for guiding and assessing
research and policy on ldquoRestrictive housingrdquo Criminal Justice and Behavior 46(10) 1427-
1444
Mears DP amp WD Bales (2009) Supermax Incarceration and Recidivism Criminology 47(4)
1131-66
National Institute of Justice (NIJ) (2016) Restrictive Housing in the US Issues Challenges and
Future Directions Washington DC National Institute of Justice
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nij250315pdf
21 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 26 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Neyfakh L 2015 What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate 432015
httpsslatecomnews-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-
surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml
OrsquoKeefe Maureen L Kelli J Klebe Alysha Stucker Kristin Sturm amp William Leggett (2011) One
Year Longitudinal Study of the Psychological Effects of Administrative Segregation Document
No 232973 Washington DC National Criminal Justice Research Service National Institute
of Justice wwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants 232973pdf
Petersilia J (1991) Policy Relevance and the Future of Criminology Criminology 29(1) 1-15
__ (2009) When Prisoners Come Home Parole and Prisoner Re-entry New York Oxford
University Press
Pyrooz D C amp M M Mitchell (2019) The Use of Restrictive Housing on Gang and Non- Gang
Affiliated Inmates in US Prisons Findings from a National Survey of Correctional Agencies
Justice Quarterly 37(4) 590-615
Pyrooz DC RM Labrecque JJ Tostlebe amp B Useem (2020) Views on COVID-19 from Inside
Prison Perspectives of High-security Prisoners Justice Evaluation Journal doi
1010802475197920201777578
Reiter K (2012) Parole Snitch or Die Californiarsquos Supermax Prisons and Prisoners 1987-2007
Punishment amp Society 14(5) 530-63
__ (2016) 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement (New Haven
Yale University Press)
__ (2018) ldquoAfter Solitary Confinementrdquo Studies in Law Politics and Society Vol 77 1-29
Reiter K J Ventura D Lovell D Augustine M Barragan T Blair K Chesnut P Dashtgard
G Gonzalez N Pifer J Strong (2020) ldquoPsychological Distress in Solitary Confinement
Symptoms Severity and Prevalence United States 2017-18rdquo American Journal of Public
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 22
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 27 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
Health Vol 110 S52-S56
Rhodes LA (2004) Total Confinement Madness and Reason in Maximum Security Berkeley
CA University of California Press
Riveland C (1999) Supermax prisons Overview and general considerations Washington DC
National Institute of Corrections httpstaticnicicgovLibrary014937pdf
Rubin A T amp Reiter K (2018) Continuity in the Face of Penal Innovation Revisiting the
History of American Solitary Confinement Law amp Social Inquiry Vol 434 1604-1632
Sakoda RT amp Simes JT (2019) Solitary Confinement and the US Prison Boom Criminal
Justice Policy Review doi 1011770887403419895315
Schlanger M (2012) Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial
disparities Michigan Journal of Race amp Law 18 241
Smith Peter S 2006 The Effects of Solitary Confinement on Prison Inmates A Brief History and
Review of the Literature In Michael Tonry (ed) Crime and Justice 34 441-528
State of Washington SHB1765 1993
Tasca Melinda amp J Turanovic (2018) Examining Race and Gender Disparities in Restrictive
Housing Placements National Institute of Justice WEB Du Bois Program of Research on
Race and Crime Project SummaryDoc No 252062
httpswwwncjrsgovpdffiles1nijgrants252062pdf
Toch Hans (1977) Living in Prison The Ecology of Survival New York Free Press
Toch H amp Adams K w Grant D (1989) Coping Maladaptation in prisons Washington DC
Transaction Publishers revised as Acting Out American Psychological Association 2002
23 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Justice Quarterly Page 28 of 29
Solitary in Washington State
Warner B D Pacholke amp C Kujath (2014) Operation Place Safety First Year in Review
(Washington State Department of Corrections)
httpswwwdocwagovdocspublicationsreports200-SR002pdf
WSIPP (Washington State Institute for Public Policy) (2006) Evidence-Based Public Policy
Options to Reduce Future Prison Construction Criminal Justice Costs and Crime Rates
httpswwwwsippwagovReportFile952Wsipp_Evidence-Based-Public-Policy-Options-to-
Reduce-Future-Prison-Construction-Criminal-Justice-Costs-and-Crime-Rates_Full-
Reportpdf
Acknowledgements The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Eldon Vail Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Formerly of the University of Washington Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor and L Clark Johnson provided critical advice at early stages of data compilation At the University of California Irvine Keely Blissmer helped to compile the literature review Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Pasha Dashtgard Gabriela Gonzalez and Justin Strong all participated in data collection and analysis at various stages of this project Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
Funding Details This work was supported by the Langeloth Foundation and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
Disclosure Statement None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
1 In a timely example of how relevant the analysis in the instant study is DOC research staff recently noted that they ldquohad some concernsrdquo with these numbers as originally reported and have revised them upwards re-calculating that in 2015 34 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo according to the ASCA-Liman Definition and in 2017 41 of the state prison population was in ldquorestrictive housingrdquo by this definition E-mail communication with DOC Department of Research dated Sept 25 and Sept 28 2020 on file with authors The ASCA-Liman report defines ldquorestrictive housingrdquo as ldquoseparating prisoners from the general population and holding them in cells for an average of 22 or more hours per day for 15 continuous days or morerdquo 2 Intra-facility housing changes and periods spent in recently decommissioned internal solitary confinement units are better captured in our related intensive field study dataset of 106 solitary confinement prisoners (Reiter et al 2020) 3 General crime types were derived from DOC codes in the administrative data Violent non-sex offenses include murder manslaughter robbery and assault sex offenses include rape sexual assault child molestation and failure to register as a sex offender property crimes include arson burglary theft forgery trafficking and possession of
URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy 24
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960
For Peer Review Only
Page 29 of 29 Justice Quarterly
Solitary in Washington State
stolen property drug crimes include manufacturing delivering or possession with intent to distribute and possession of a controlled substance 4 To avoid confusion we follow DOCs terminology with the term Hispanic which DOC codes separately from race as lsquoHispanic Originrsquo (YN) but we apply these data to define mutually exclusive categories ldquoWhite non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as White and who is not classified as Hispanic Origin ldquoBlack non-Hispanicrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as Black and not identified as Hispanic ldquoHispanicrdquo includes any individual whose ethnicity is listed as Hispanic or Latino regardless of any other racial identification ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo includes any individual whose race is listed as AsianPacific Islander Native AmericanAmerican Indian Other Unknown and whose ethnicity is not Hispanic 5 Rates of gang affiliation by racialethnic group were generated by dividing the total number of members in each racialethnic group identified as an STG member by the total number of prisoners of each racialethnic group Table 1 displays the STG membership by racialethnic affiliation of STGs grouped from detailed STG data provided by DOC STGs identified as ldquoWhiterdquo affiliated included Biker Skinhead White Supremacist and Security Threat Concern ldquoBlackrdquo affiliated included Black Gangster Disciples Blood Crip and Vice Lord ldquoHispanicrdquo affiliated included Nortentildeo Surentildeo Paisas La Fuma Cuban and Hispanic-Other ldquoOtherrdquo affiliated included Asian and Other 6 Our original analysis identified an even larger proportion of prisoners in this ldquoOther-Maxrdquo group our practitioner collaborators thought more than 10 was an unlikely proportion of prisoners to be assigned max custody status but still awaiting placement in an IMU or similar facility and encouraged us to evaluate whether some of those ldquoOther-Maxrdquo prisoners were housed out-of-state Indeed when we examined individual cases in the original movement files we found this was true leading us to better specify and exclude those prisoners in our sample of any custody status who were housed out of state 7 Here the 45-day cut point reflects institutionally-mandated administrative hearings required to extend or release an individual from administrative segregation Likewise for those classified as Max (re-)classification reviews only happen every 6-12 months as reflected in the overall longer mean lengths of stay for IMU-Max as opposed to IMU-AdDSeg groups Both represent examples of policies driving patterns in lengths of stay 8 This analysis uses the person (in custody as of the snapshot date) as the unit of analysis Even if a single person has multiple stays in an IMU during the current admission up to the snapshot date they would be counted only once as ldquohaving spent at least one day in an IMUrdquo We further examined the average percentage of days spent in an IMU out of the total number of days in prison up to the snapshot date for each cohort finding an increasing proportion of prison time spent in IMUs across the cohorts While not presented here in detail this finding reinforces the trends in the cumulative time spent in IMU and average LOS analyses 9 Unlike the cumulative days in IMU calculations the average length of stay by classification and confinement levels presented here do not cumulate days in IMU facilities Here each placement in a distinct IMU facility is analyzed as a separate placement term Thus if one prisoner is placed in IMU facility A and subsequently moved to IMU facility B the length of stay in each placement will be counted separately (To the extent individuals have consecutive stays across multiple IMUs then these numbers might undercount average lengths of total stay) Length of stay is calculated from admission date in the current incarceration up until the snapshot date 10 The general population (GP) excludes prisoners housed in IMUs prisoners with a max custody classification held in other locations (ie those in SOU ITP or ldquoOther Locationsrdquo) prisoners held out of state and prisoners whose locations or custody statuses were unknown 11 Violent infractions include seven infraction types aggravated assault on another offender fighting possession of a weapon aggravated assault on a staff member sexual assault of a staff member assault on another offender sexual assault of another offender and assault on a staff member
25 URL httpmcmanuscriptcentralcomrjqy
D PLOS ONE ARTICLE
See next page
91
ID
ID
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
a1111111111
PLOS ONE
OPEN ACCESS
Citation Strong JD Reiter K Gonzalez G Tublitz R Augustine D Barragan M et al (2020) The body in isolation The physical health impacts of incarceration in solitary confinement PLoS ONE 15 (10) e0238510 httpsdoiorg101371journal pone0238510
Editor Andrea Knittel University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill UNITED STATES
Received February 19 2020
Accepted August 18 2020
Published October 9 2020
Peer Review History PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process therefore we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final published articles The editorial history of this article is available here httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510
Copyright copy 2020 Strong et al This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original author and source are credited
Data Availability Statement Data cannot be shared publicly because the administrative data we analyze in this paper is drawn from a confidential data file shared with the research team for the
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The body in isolation The physical health
impacts of incarceration in solitary
confinement
Justin D Strong 1 Keramet Reiter1 Gabriela Gonzalez1Dagger Rebecca Tublitz1Dagger
Dallas Augustine1Dagger Melissa Barragan1Dagger Kelsie Chesnut 1Dagger Pasha Dashtgard2Dagger
Natalie Pifer3Dagger Thomas R Blair4Dagger
1 Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Irvine California United
States of America 2 Department of Psychological Sciences University of California Irvine Irvine California
United States of America 3 Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice The University of Rhode Island
Kingston Rhode Island United States of America 4 Department of Psychiatry Southern California
Permanente Medical Group Downey Los Angeles California United States of America
These authors contributed equally to this work
Dagger These authors also contributed equally to this work GG and RT are joint assistant authors on this work
jdstronguciedu
Abstract
We examine how solitary confinement correlates with self-reported adverse physical health
outcomes and how such outcomes extend the understanding of the health disparities associ-
ated with incarceration Using a mixed methods approach we find that solitary confinement is
associated not just with mental but also with physical health problems Given the dispropor-
tionate use of solitary among incarcerated people of color these symptoms are most likely to
affect those populations Drawing from a random sample of prisoners (n = 106) in long-term
solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections in 2017 we con-
ducted semi-structured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assess-
ments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for these subjects We also
conducted a paper survey of the entire long-term solitary confinement population (n = 225
respondents) and analyzed administrative data for the entire population of prisoners in the
state in 2017 (n = 17943) Results reflect qualitative content and descriptive statistical analy-
sis BPRS scores reflect clinically significant somatic concerns in 15 of sample Objective
specification of medical conditions is generally elusive but that itself is a highly informative
finding Using subjective reports we specify and analyze a range of physical symptoms expe-
rienced in solitary confinement (1) skin irritations and weight fluctuation associated with the
restrictive conditions of solitary confinement (2) un-treated and mis-treated chronic conditions
associated with the restrictive policies of solitary confinement (3) musculoskeletal pain exac-
erbated by both restrictive conditions and policies Administrative data analyses reveal dispro-
portionate rates of racialethnic minorities in solitary confinement This analysis raises the
stakes for future studies to evaluate comparative prevalence of objective medical diagnoses
and potential causal mechanisms for the physical symptoms specified here and for under-
standing differential use of solitary confinement and its medically harmful sequelae
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 1 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
limited purpose of evaluating patterns of solitary confinement use in the Washington department of corrections If any researchers wish to obtain a similar data file from the Washington department of corrections the authors of this paper would be happy to consult with those researchers about the request and the process for obtaining the data In theory the administrative data file used in this study could be accessed again by future researchers Researchers would need to contact the Washington department of corrections Here is the process and relevant contacts httpswww DocWaGovinformationdataresearch Htmrequests We confirm the authors have no special access privileges others would not have to the data underlying our study beyond patient negotiations with the Washington department of corrections about exactly what data would be shared for what purposes
Funding KR received a Langeloth Grant from the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation https wwwlangelothorg The funders had no role in study design data collection and analysis decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist
Introduction
The health implications of solitary confinement have received increasing attention in recent
years [1 2] Although both the conditions and terms defining solitary confinement are con-
tested the practice generally involves being locked in a cell alone for 22 or more hours per
day with extremely limited access to human contact and communication [3 4] Until recently
however research on the health consequences of solitary confinement has focused almost
entirely on the negative impacts on mental health [4ndash8] While initial studies focused on the
effects of sensory deprivation [9ndash11] recent work has examined the impacts of social depriva-
tions [12 13] Such studies have found that placement in solitary confinement has been associ-
ated with symptoms of increased psychological distress such as anxiety depression paranoia
and aggression [14ndash16] A 2018 study for instance found that prisoners who had spent time
in solitary confinement were three times as likely to exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) than those who had not [17] Some researchers however have argued that
the psychological harms of solitary confinement are limited or unverified [18 19] The analy-
ses on which such opinions rely have in turn been criticized for neglecting existing literature
and for other serious methodological concerns including an inability to isolate exposure to
solitary confinement lack of specificity about variability and comparability in actual condi-
tions of confinement and the inapplicability of psychological assessment scales in the prison
context [1 20]
In a study examining the lived experiences of solitary confinement in Washington state we
too focused on documenting the mental health impacts of the practice through qualitative
interviews with a random sample of 106 prisoners in long-term solitary confinement applica-
tion of a Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) assessment at two points in time with those pris-
oners review of medical health records and analysis of administrative data To our surprise
however we found that after anxiety and depression the third most common significant
health symptoms experienced by our subjects were ldquosomatic concernsrdquo defined by the BPRS
as ldquoconcerns over present bodily healthrdquo [21] This observation led us to examine our data sys-
tematically for evidence of the impacts of solitary confinement on physical health and to con-
sider the implications of such impacts for understanding the health disparities enacted by
solitary confinement and by incarceration more broadly
Existing research on the physical health impacts of incarceration demonstrates the need for
further study of both the medical effects of isolation and its racially disparate impacts espe-
cially considering that there are roughly 80000 people in isolation units nationwide and this
population includes a disproportionate number of racial minorities relative to the overall
prison population [22] Outside of prison health disparities by race and ethnicity are well
attested by existing epidemiologic research [23] Notably Black and other racialethnic minor-
ities consistently show lower life expectancies and worse mental health outcomes than whites
[24ndash27] Health disparities persist and are magnified among the incarcerated population
where people of color are disproportionately represented [28ndash30] In particular people in
prison are at higher risk than the general population for substance use disorders psychiatric
disorders victimization and chronic infectious diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C [31ndash34]
Incarceration has also been shown to exacerbate chronic illnesses such as obesity [35] hyper-
tension and asthma [36 37 29] and formerly incarcerated people experience disparately
adverse health outcomes more generally [38] The interaction between the disparate impacts
of race and incarceration on health mean that mass incarceration itself has been identified as a
social determinant of health for Black men in the United States [39 40]
Solitary confinement amplifies the disproportionately adverse effects of mass incarceration
on people of color Depending on the composition of the prison system Blacks andor Latinos
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 2 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
are often over-represented in solitary confinement relative to their (over)representation in the
general prison population [40ndash44] Any concentrated health disadvantages affecting people in
prison and especially people of color is potentially even more concentrated among those liv-
ing in solitary confinement Moreover existing evidence suggests that conditions of solitary
confinement exacerbate health problems and pose a significant public health risk [45 42]
Studies reporting the physical health impacts of solitary confinement have tended to focus
on issues like self-harm and suicide [46 47 8] One recent study has examined the cardiovas-
cular health burdens of solitary confinement [45] A growing body of neuroscience literature
has examined the effects of solitary confinement on the brains of lab animals documenting
that lab animals in isolated environments have ldquoa decrease in the anatomical complexity of the
brainrdquo compared to those in more enriched environments [48 49] (p70) One recent study
found similar effects in Antarctic expeditioners a shrinking hippocampus hypothesized to be
a result of the isolated and monotonous environment [50] Such neuroscience research has
been used in litigation to argue that there is likely a similar effect on humans imprisoned in
solitary confinement [51 48 49] The associations between solitary confinement self-harm
and lab animalsrsquo brain structure suggest comorbidity between mental health and physical
injury in solitary confinement [1 48]
The physical effects of solitary confinement manifest well beyond release from isolation
and from incarceration overall One recent study has examined post-release mortality (from
all causes including suicide murder and drug overdose) associated with previous time in soli-
tary confinement people who had spent time in solitary confinement in North Carolina
between 2000 and 2015 were 24 more likely to die in their first year after release than former
prisoners who had not spent time in solitary confinement [52] Similarly a 2020 study found
that Danish people who had spent time in solitary confinement had higher mortality within
five years of being released from prison compared to those who never spent time in solitary
confinement [53] This mortality risk associated with solitary confinement exceeds the already
high mortality risk associated with incarceration and release from prison [52ndash54]
In sum while many studies have examined the relationship between incarceration and
health and some studies have examined the relationship between solitary confinement and
mental health the existing literature lacks analysis of disparate physical health outcomes across
levels and severity of confinement [2] especially within isolation and for incarcerated people
of color To our knowledge this article is the first of its kind to consider associations between
solitary confinement and a range of physical health problems and to incorporate explicit con-
sideration of racial health disparities
Methods and materials
To explore the physical health problems experienced in isolation we draw upon a research
study of people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of
Corrections (WADOC) The study consists of four dimensions of participant data 1 surveys
of prisoners in solitary confinement 2 in-depth interviews with a random sample of prisoners
in solitary confinement 3 reviews of the medical (covering mental and physical health) files
as well as the disciplinary records for this subset of prisoners and 4 administrative data for
the entire 2017 prison population provided by the WADOC Data was collected in 2017 and
2018
Setting
WADOC is a mid-sized state prison system with the 12th lowest rate of incarceration of the 50
United States [20] The state and its prison system have a reputation for being progressive
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 3 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
including engaging in reforms to minimize the use of solitary confinement statewide and for
inviting independent academic researchers to evaluate conditions and programs [20 55ndash57]
Five of the statersquos 12 prison facilities have an Intensive Management Unit (IMU) an all-male
unit or building housing people in solitary confinement (with highly restricted access to com-
missary phones radios televisions visitors and roughly 10 hours per week out-of-cell) for
durations ranging from months to years Our study focused on people within the IMUs on
ldquomaximum custody statusrdquo the highest security level assigned to state prisoners housed in the
IMU for an indeterminate period usually following one or more rule violations with return to
the general prison population contingent on meeting specific benchmarks
Participant sampling
First paper surveys were distributed in-person (and collected on the same day) to all 363 peo-
ple on maximum custody status in the five state IMUs in the spring of 2017 Next during the
summer of 2017 roughly one-third (29) of all 363 people on maximum custody status in
IMUs were interviewed selected from randomly ordered lists of the population of each IMU
One year later (2018) all participants from our initial random sample who were still incarcer-
ated one year later including those no longer housed in the IMU were re-interviewed We
also reviewed paper medical and disciplinary files for each consenting year-one interview par-
ticipant Interviews file reviews and observations were conducted over two separate three-
week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team members
Finally we received administrative data on all people within the state prison system as of July
1 2017
Research team training
All interviewers underwent an extensive training process including more than 20 hours of
meetings to learn about conditions in Washington IMUs and develop the interview instru-
ment Interviewers completed an additional 20 hours of a standardized training protocol for
administering the BPRS in clinical settings 16 hours of in-person symptom assessment train-
ing sessions with a leading expert in BPRS researchmdashDr Joe Venturamdashin year one and four
hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews Dr Ventura conducted an interra-
ter reliability analysis confirming trained raters met the minimum standard of an ICC = 80 or
greater for the BPRS This extensive training sought to ensure that the 13 team members (9
women and 4 men 9 white and 4 non-white) all faculty (4) or doctoral students (9) with
expertise in prisons and prior interview experience in secure confinement settings identified
and addressed any pre-existing assumptions about the population being studied and mini-
mized any possible bias as a result of inconsistent interpretation or application of questions
and assessments Eight of the authors on this paper participated in interviews two participated
only in data analysis
Interviews
On site in the Washington State IMUs after the random sample was drawn and willing partici-
pants identified prison staff escorted participants one at a time to a confidential area (moni-
tored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff) Prior to conducting interviews interviewers
informed participants that participation was voluntary and would not involve incentives
administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all informa-
tion shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent security-
related threatrdquo (In the highly restrictive setting of the IMU any incentive beyond providing
human contact and an attentive listener would both run the risk of being an undue influence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 4 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
coercing participation and be administratively prohibited) Participants provided oral consent
to participate in the interview Immediately following interviews interviewers asked partici-
pants whether they consented to the research team reviewing their medical files and to partici-
pating in one-year follow-up interviews All participants agreed orally to re-interviews and all
but two (n = 104) consented in writing to medical file reviews Following interviews interview-
ers reviewed consenting participantsrsquo paper medical files for histories of diagnoses prescrip-
tions and substance abuse status WADOC additionally provided electronic administrative
health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants as well as comparable popula-
tion-level data for all people incarcerated in the system in July 2017
All identifiable data collected for this research including interview audio recordings tran-
scripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office of the university or in a secure server space accessible
only through multi-factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in
data cleaning and linking The University of California Irvine Office of Research Institutional
Review Board approved this study (HS 2016ndash2816) and the WADOC Research Department
reviewed this approval
Data collection instruments
The initial paper survey of people confined in the WADOC IMU consisted of 36 numbered
questions (each containing a combination of yesno ordinal bubble options and short answer
sub-questions leaving participants an opportunity to explain or elaborate on their answers)
about experiences in IMUs conditions of confinement health and well-being and demo-
graphic background drawing from existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [58ndash
62] Survey in S1 Text In all there were 89 substantive items on the survey (excluding demo-
graphic questions) coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg number of days in IMU) ordinal (eg
daily weekly monthly describing frequency of interactions) or categorical (eg yesno) vari-
ables In this paper we report on the results of a sub-set of five quantitatively coded items relat-
ing to health from this larger survey This survey functioned as a pilot instrument for the in-
person interviews allowing us to ensure questions were clear and relevant yielding responses
comparable across subjects and institutional contexts and providing our interviewers with a
baseline description of participantsrsquo experiences prior to conducting qualitative interviews
The qualitative interview instrument consisted of 96 numbered semi-structured questions
(each containing a combination of yesno questions and probing open-ended follow-up ques-
tions) seeking elaboration on responses from the survey questions and also drawing from
existing studies on prisons and prisoner experiences [60ndash63] including conditions of daily life
(prior to and during isolation) perceived state of physical and mental health access to medical
treatment and experiences with required programming in the IMU among other topics
Interview instrument in S2 Text We first used the instrument at the smallest IMU in Wash-
ington interviewing 15 prisoners and we then revised both the wording and ordering of ques-
tions for maximum clarity and engagement in the remaining 91 interviews we conducted
across the four other IMUs in the state In total 40 of the substantive items on the interview
instrument (excluding 10 demographic questions and 18 embedded questions designed to
establish BPRS scores andor assess orientation) were coded quantitatively as cardinal (eg
How much does it cost to see a doctor or dentist) or categorical (eg Have you noticed any
changes in your health since you have been in this IMU) variables Such questions always
included open-ended follow-up questions (eg Can you describe those changes) Transcribed
responses to those open-ended follow-up questions which related in any way to physical
health constitute the central source of data analyzed in this paper
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 5 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Interviews ranged in length from 45 minutes to three hours Follow-up interviews lasted
between 45 minutes and two hours The condensed year-two instrument contained approxi-
mately 70 questions largely replicating the year-one questions but excluding the background
demographic questions and questions about experiences over time in prison and adjusting
some questions to address prisonersrsquo current (and often different) housing status
As part of both initial and follow-up instruments interviewers administered the BPRS psy-
chological assessment both during (for the 14 self-report questions) and immediately following
(for the 10 observational items regarding a participantrsquos demeanor engagement and speech)
the interviews For self-report questions (14 items) embedded in the interview guide inter-
viewers asked about the presence of symptoms in the two weeks prior per BPRS standard [20]
Interviews were assigned a randomly generated identifier audio recorded (with permis-
sion) professionally transcribed in Microsoft Word translated (in one case from Spanish into
English) by research team members systematically stripped of identifying information and
then systematically checked against the original audio by the original interviewer(s) Interviews
were linked by random identifier to BPRS score sheets (which were scanned and entered into
Microsoft Excel for descriptive statistical analysis) scanned medical file review notes and
WADOC administrative data
Data analysis amp reporting
BPRS and other administrative data were imported into Statistical Package for Social Science
(SPSS) (IBM Armonk NY) and Stata (StataCorp LLC College Station TX) to generate
descriptive statistics including the comparative prevalence of significant ratings on BPRS
items and factors relating to physical health and demographics of the sample interview popula-
tion as compared to the IMU population the overall state prison population and the overall
population of the state itself Fisherrsquos exact test and McNemarrsquos test were performed to evaluate
the relationships between BPRS ratings across housing location time and raceethnicity chi
square tests of homogeneity were performed to compare racialethnic distributions in the
IMU population the general prison population and the Washington state population The
demographic data utilizes a confidential data file from the WADOC
Transcribed interviews were analyzed using Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software Develop-
ment GmbH Berlin Germany) Six team members who had also conducted interviews
engaged in an iterative and recursive coding process Consistent with the tenets of constructivist
grounded theory coders inductively explored how participants make meaning of their experi-
ences (here their time in solitary confinement) [63 64] This process included initial line-by-
line open-coding of a subset of transcripts which generated a list of 214 codes grouped into 11
major categories (eg Health) with sub-themes (eg physical health) [63] Some of these initial
codes and categories corresponded with specific questions on our interview instrument (most
relevant for the instant analysis question 29 concerned medical ldquokitesrdquo and questions 30 31
and 38 concerned physical health and somatic concerns) However open-ended questions also
yielded responses related to these topics and were so coded Given the constraints of the prison
setting (in-person contact is expensive and time-consuming mail contact is not confidential
because of prison censoring policies) participants have not provided systematic feedback on
their transcripts or our findings However the year-two interviews did give research team mem-
bers an opportunity to discuss year-one themes with participants
All quotations presented in this paper were initially identified in the first phase of our cod-
ing process by one of three (out of our initial 214) codes ldquosomatic concernsrdquo ldquophysical healthrdquo
or ldquokitesrdquo (the standard slang term for a paper form handed to a correctional officer to request
medical attention) Two coders then used intermediate focused coding techniques to
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 6 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
re-code these 319 quotes exploring the relationship between solitary confinement condi-
tions and policies and physical health problems ldquotransform[ing] basic data into more abstract
concepts and allowing the theory to emerge from the datardquo [64 p 5]
Notes from reviewing participantsrsquo paper medical files corroborate details from the qualita-
tive analysis that systematically anchors this data Each participant has been assigned a pseudo-
nym and because we are also exploring the racially disparate impact of the health problems we
identify we specify each quoted participantrsquos self-identified race or ethnicity We linked quota-
tions to specific racialethnic identities only after quotations were selected for inclusion in this
manuscript as representative of the themes we identified in coding
Results
In total 225 prisoners in IMU (62) responded to our in-person survey The refusal rate of
initial interviews was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of prison-
ers [15 58 59 65] The drop-out rate of our sample for the one-year follow-up interviews was
comparable to other studies at 25 there were 4 refusals 21 institutional out-of-state and
parole transfers precluding follow-up and one death [58ndash61] Our random sample of 106 (all-
male) IMU prisoners reflects a mean age of 35 mean stay of 145 months in IMU mean of 5
prior convictions resulting in prison sentences Among our participants 42 were white 12
were African American 23 were Latino 23 were ldquoOtherrdquo There were no significant differ-
ences between our participants and all people held in IMU at the time of our sample People in
the general prison population at the time of our sample are notably different as they are older
less violent in terms of criminal history serving shorter sentences less likely to be gang-affili-
ated and less likely to be Latino than those held in IMU [20] (We discuss racial differences
across these populations further in the final results sub-section)
Prevalence of somatic concerns
As an initial basis for describing physical symptoms experienced in solitary confinement we
present a quantitative analysis of the prevalence of somatic concerns in our random sample of
106 people held in IMU and the variability of these concerns across time and housing location
In 2017 15 of participants reported having clinically significant (formally defined as a sever-
ity of 4 or higher out of a possible 7) somatic concerns (formally defined as ldquoconcern over pres-
ent bodily healthrdquo) on the BPRS assessment [21] In the 2018 re-interview sample of the 80
respondents re-interviewed in the second year of the study 125 reported clinically signifi-
cant ratings of somatic concern
While ratings of clinically significant somatic concern mostly varied within participants
over time our analysis indicated some persistence of somatic issues across the two assessment
periods Of those who reported clinically significant somatic concern in 2017 and who were
re-interviewed in 2018 (12 respondents 4 were unavailable for re-interview) 25 (3 respon-
dents) indicated a persistence of clinically significant somatic issues in 2018 An exact McNe-
marrsquos test revealed no statistically significant relationship between the proportion of
respondents reporting clinically significant somatic concerns in 2017 and 2018 (p = 0 0) In the initial 2017 assessment all study subjects were housed in IMU At the time of re-
interview in 2018 52 respondents had moved into the general prison population while 28
remained in IMU Of those who were still in IMU in 2018 21 (6 of 28) reported clinically sig-
nificant somatic concerns compared to just 8 of those housed in the general prison popula-
tion (4 of 52) While the descriptive data appear to demonstrate higher proportions of somatic
concern in IMU settings the difference was not statistically significant at the 95 confidence
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 7 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
level (p = 009 Fisherrsquos exact test) No significant differences were observed in the distribution
of clinically significant somatic concern ratings across racial and ethnic groups
Complementing the BPRS assessment data from the random sample of 106 individuals in
IMU custody survey data collected from the full IMU population in 2017 further indicated the
prevalence of somatic concerns among this population Of the 225 survey respondents 63
expressed health concerns 48 were taking medication 17 had arthritis and 8 had experi-
enced a fall in solitary confinement Importantly for the analysis of emerging symptoms in par-
ticular 82 replied ldquoyesrdquo to the question ldquoHave you experienced any changes in yourselfrdquo
while in the IMU These survey results like the BPRS somatic concern results benefit from tri-
angulation with our qualitative data
Specifying physical symptoms
We identify three categories of physical symptoms people experience in solitary confinement
each associated with different aspects of IMU housing symptoms associated with deprivation
conditions symptoms associated with deprivation policies limiting access to healthcare and
chronic musculoskeletal pain exacerbated by the intersection of deprivation conditions and
deprivation policies In each category we analyze how the institution of solitary confinement
shapes both physical health outcomes and perceptions of health for people housed in solitary
confinement revealing both the mechanisms of physical health deterioration and the accentu-
ated comorbidity of physical and mental health in solitary confinement
Deprivation conditions Our participants described a range of physical ailments directly
connected to the conditions of their confinement especially the various deprivations of movement
provisions (from food to toiletries) and human contact inherent in the institutional restrictions
defining solitary confinement Skin irritations and weight fluctuations were the most common of
these participants experienced both as co-morbid with anxiety and other health issues
Participants described rashes dry and flaky skin and fungus developing in isolation They
understood these conditions as being directly associated the poor air and water quality irritat-
ing hygiene products and lack of sun exposure inherent to their conditions of solitary confine-
ment People in the IMU (unlike those in the general prison population) usually cannot
purchase or trade for alternative higher-quality hygiene products their cells have limited nat-
ural light (at best a window far above eye-level at worst no window) and even the exercise
areas frequently have limited natural light Indeed research has documented how isolation can
cause vitamin D deficiency due to lack of natural light exposure [66]
As Joseph (white) explained an ostensibly trivial physical problem like dandruff can
inspire a sense of helplessness in the IMU
Well I try not to [think about] what happens to my body Because yoursquore going to obsess
on it probably Minor things become huge when yoursquore in segregation and so something
that youndashyou as being free in society can alleviate by going to you know to [the store] or
whatever and just get a dandruff shampoo You canrsquot do that here And kiting medical and
telling them ldquoHey I have a severe problem with dermatitis and my headrsquos itching and Irsquove
got bleeding scabs on my headrdquo or whatever the case may be therersquos nothing that we can
do here Yoursquore SOL [shit out of luck]
Josephrsquos inability to treat his skin irritations himself led to both helplessness and obsessive-
ness further exacerbating the discomfort and potential health consequences of the issue This
case illustrates how a free personrsquos flaky skin or minor embarrassment becomes a potentially
severe medical problem in solitary confinement entailing bleeding scabs on the scalp
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 8 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Participants frequently experienced fluctuations in body weight and as with skin irritations
connected these symptoms to conditions inherent to solitary confinement What started as
simple observations about diet exercise and appearance often turned into analyses of the
impact of conditions of confinement on physical as well as mental health Simon (Black) dis-
cussed being ldquoreal worriedrdquo about his weight
The only reason I know theyrsquore not really giving us the calorie needs theyrsquore supposed to
give us is because I feel like Irsquom losing more muscle than I am fat And to lose more muscle
than fat is because yoursquore not getting the nutrients that you need
Not only is weight loss a significant source of anxiety for Simon but he connects the depri-
vations of confinementndashthe lack of nutritious food and sufficient caloriesndashto physical changes
in his body Whether his explanation is correct or simple lack of physical activity is more likely
to explain the changes accurately IMU confinement ostensibly produced the change
Participants also described restricting their own dietary intake beyond the already limited
rations (usually calculated to meet the minimum daily calorie intake standards) for a variety
of reasons from the quality of the food to their emotional state Michael (Latino) described
being suspicious of staff having tampered with his food ldquoI got my breakfast bowl and there
was a tear on the plastic [ ] Sometimes your mind plays tricks on you like theyrsquore trying to
poison you or somethingrdquo While Michael noted that his suspicions were likely just in his
mind Philip (Black) asserted ldquoThey was poisoning my foodndashthey control everything They
can even manipulate the water Irsquom so fucking serious this place is highly technologically
advancedrdquo For those like Michael and Philip psychological states associated with the condi-
tions of confinement (eg suspiciousness paranoia and potentially psychosis) caused them to
restrict their food intake resulting in weight loss Indeed both Michael and Philip had docu-
mented diagnoses of mental illness in their medical files bipolar disorder and undifferentiated
schizophrenia respectively Food restrictions can of course lead to more imminently danger-
ous conditions such as dehydration electrolyte imbalances or renal failurendashnone of which are
likely to be subject to objective evaluation in the IMU as we discuss further in the next sub-
section on the impacts of deprivation policies
Some prisoners made a more direct connection between their mental health their dietary
intake and their physical health For instance Kai (Native American) said
I donrsquot work out because I have a problem breathing This is the first time Irsquove ever done
a program [IMU term] where Irsquove felt like I was breaking Because before Irsquod be working
out Now Irsquom stuck in this Irsquom battling mentally with everything going on Which
affected my body effects my eating sometimes Irsquoll just take the [food] tray but Irsquoll flush the
stuff down the toilet
As Kai suggests in the IMU exercise functions not only as a means to practice physical fit-
ness but also to provide structure for people to manage both their days and the mental strain of
being in isolation When asked a general question like ldquohow are you doing in the IMUrdquo many
participants like Kai referenced whether or not they were engaging in exercise as a way to
gauge how they were faring overall People like Kai shared feelings of lethargy or feeling too
overwhelmed to do anything but lie around all day induced by long periods in solitary confine-
ment Their weight fluctuated during these cycles going down with regular and social exercise
routines going up with exercise-induced injuries or periods of lethargy Concerns around exer-
cise diet and the associated body weight fluctuations like concerns with skin irritations high-
light the interdependence of physical and mental wellbeing for prisoners in the IMU
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 9 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Deprivation policies Our participants described multiple situations in which official
IMU policies and unofficial IMU practices exacerbated their physical ailments especially their
chronic health problems Such policies and practices included the prioritization of security
over care in emergency situations disruptions in care upon transfer into the IMU and over-
whelming administrative hurdles to accessing care in the first place If prisons are largely
unequipped to provide the appropriate care and environment for chronic medical problems
[67 31] our findings reveal both the specific mechanisms by which solitary confinement poli-
cies amplify the usual bureaucratic challenges of accessing healthcare in prison and the kinds
of physical health problems that go unaddressed as a result
First in cases of medical emergencies people housed in the IMU have response buttons in
their cells they can press to alert staff However many of the people we interviewed both
doubted whether staff would respond swiftly enough in an actual emergency and worried
about being punished with additional time in the IMU for activating an emergency response
if medical staff ultimately deemed their problem non-emergent Indeed prisoners perceived
IMU policies as systematically prioritizing incapacitation over medical attention Carl (white)
described an incident where he experienced delayed care and was pepper sprayed after having
suffered from a seizure all because he was unable to comply with orders to stand following the
episode
I had a serious seizure And I was laying on the floor and I had defecated I was laying in a
puddle of puke Well [the guards] had come to the door and I guess they had called med-
ical and they were standing there for 45 minutes yelling ldquoStand up and cuff up so we can
give you medical attentionrdquo They did not pop the door and go in there and give me medical
attention And so unknown to me they popped the cuff port and they sprayed OC [pepper
spray] in there And then they came in They noticed that I was unconscious and finally a
nurse looked at my medical file and shersquos like ldquohersquos epilepticrdquo
In the tense environment of the IMU where staff manage people with histories of violating
prison rules assaulting staff and often serious mental health needs immediate security con-
cerns readily take priority over assessing medical histories and providing healthcare
Second simply being transferred into the IMU often disrupted care in dangerous ways For
instance Julian (Hawaiian) described how when he was transferred into a new solitary con-
finement unit he had to restart the process of seeking treatment for (and even simple acknowl-
edgement of) recurring kidney stones Whereas he had fought and been able to receive x-rays
and medication to help manage his kidney pain at his prior institution he now found this fight
to be futile at his new facility ldquoTheyrsquore just going to take me out of room take me over there to
medical and theyrsquore going to be like oh herersquos the hot water or hot bag or whateverrdquo And
Tony (Native Americanwhite) described a battery of physical and mental health issuesndashan
enlarged prostate a painful cyst that needed to be surgically removed varicose veins ldquochronic
suicidal thoughtsrdquo anxiety and depressionndashall requiring medications which he had difficulty
maintaining access to in the IMU For instance he described how both his Amitriptyline
which partly treated his periodic limb movement sleep disorder and his seizure medication
Dilantin were both discontinued in the IMU resulting in serious injuries to his foot and head
Third a number of bureaucratic hurdles and barriers discouraged people in the IMU from
attempting to access healthcare at all even in potentially life-threatening situations In order to
see a medical professional people isolated in the IMU must fill out a paper request (a ldquokiterdquo)
and hand it to a correctional officer passing by or report a concern to a nurse who makes
daily rounds passing by each cell in the IMU The medical response happens either ldquocellfrontrdquo
with the person talking to the medical professional through his cell door in earshot of others
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 10 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
held in solitary confinement or ldquoby escortrdquo with the person in handcuffs and leg-cuffs if not
also belly chains and a hood usually accompanied by at least two to four correctional officers
to a medical treatment area Vitamins and over-the-counter medications like Tylenol or as-
needed medications like asthma inhalers are kept outside of the cell and available only at spec-
ified times or again by paper kite request Throughout WADOC people must pay $4 for
non-emergency medical care (unless they are indigent in which case WADOC provides care
without a co-pay) but people held in the IMU have more restrictive caps on their overall
spending for any needs including healthcare food and toiletries proportionally raising the
relative cost of seeking care for non-emergency symptoms
These policies in combination with negative perceptions about the quality of care available
to them dissuaded participants from seeking medical services Deon (Black) described new
and unfamiliar ldquobreathing problemsrdquo and rising ldquoblood pressurerdquo in IMU but felt that seeking
medical attention would be useless
Itrsquos pointless for me to knock on the window and ask the nurse ldquoHey nurse do thisrdquo
Because every time I knock on the windowndashit is pointless because the only thing the DOC
wants is money It is money I think people in the cell should be important And itrsquos a
long time but Irsquod just rather wait till I get out
Later in the interview Deon links his rising blood pressure to his isolation ldquoI never had
blood pressure problems until I went to this IMUrdquo Because Deon does not expect to be treated
with care or dignity he avoids medical treatment As a result his new breathing issues and ris-
ing blood pressure went unnoticed by medical staff and Deon did not find out the cause
Blake (white) described experiencing unfamiliar physical health symptoms in the IMU for
which he was also hopeless about receiving any medical assistance
Irsquove been told I have a heart murmur but for like last two weeks Irsquove been feeling my
heart like feeling weird like it flutters once in a while [I] just donrsquot tell nobody because
they wonrsquot do nothing about it unless yoursquore actually having a heart attack or unless you
declare a medical emergency theyrsquoll pull you out take your vitals and then charge you 4
bucks If I have a heart attack or donrsquot have a heart attack it donrsquot matter
Not only did Blake like Deon doubt whether a prison medical provider would believe him
and try to help him but he was further dissuaded from seeking treatment by the $4 institution-
ally-imposed cost for non-emergency treatment Four dollars is arguably worth much more in
prison that it would be even to a destitute person on the outside and worth more still to some-
one in the IMU Under WADOC policy people in IMU are only allowed to spend $10 per
week on store items such as coffee pastries and deodorant The $4 medical fee would absorb
nearly half of this weekly spending cap Blake might have had clinically insignificant subjective
palpitations or the onset of atrial fibrillation following an undiagnosed myocardial infarction
his confinement status rendered clarification functionally unavailable
Like many other participants Deon and Blake expressed a sense of futility about seeking
medical assistance while in the IMU dissuaded by bureaucratic hurdles from perceived dis-
missiveness and indignity (exemplified in the problem of dual loyalty [67]) to actual costs of
care Futility in turn led to non-evaluation of emerging medical problems Still Deon and
Blake expressed a passive acceptance of their situation ldquoitrsquos pointlessrdquo and ldquoit donrsquot matterrdquo
This hopelessness reflects a precarity unique to solitary confinement wondering whether med-
ications would be provided and refills renewed whether the severity of ailments would be
acknowledged and whether medical emergencies would be addressed or instead treated as
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 11 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
security threats As our participantsrsquo experiences suggest solitary confinement carries the
additional punishment of substandard access to health care
Exacerbating musculoskeletal pain Participants spoke frequently about one specific
chronic ailment in solitary confinement musculoskeletal pain The experiences of people in
solitary confinement with chronic musculoskeletal pain reveal how the prior two categories of
symptoms we analyze those associated with deprivation conditions and those associated with
deprivation policies in solitary confinement interact to exacerbate physical health problems
While participants attributed their musculoskeletal pain to a range of causes from physical
injury to arthritis bursitis and sciatica they consistently experienced this pain as untreated
and interfering (physically and mentally) with even those few limited activities available to
them in solitary confinement
For instance Victor (Latino) described his frustrations with attempts to get care let alone
relief from the pain of his sciatica
Irsquove been told I have nothing wrong with me but I have been hurt and they took x-rays of
my back and they found that the disks are in there or something thatrsquos triggering some
nerves And I still got a little bit of time left and they just opened up an Ibuprofen right
now And that stuff doesnrsquot work So what can you do
Victorrsquos medical file highlights persistence of chronic pain in his back and hips and notes
that he avoided sitting down for longer than 5ndash10 minutes Not only did participants describe
untreated pain but they described the anxiety associated with the lack of treatment Isaac
(BlackLatino) described how he experienced both quad and hamstring pain in the IMU and
how this escalated his physical health concerns ldquoIrsquoll start thinking like oh Irsquom laying in bed
too much Maybe my muscles are starting to rot you know eating on themselvesrdquo In a similar
sentiment Tim (white) stated ldquoMy body is likendashI canrsquot explain it Like my skeleton feels like
my skeletonrsquos broken or somethingrdquo While Victor must bear persistent pain and the anxiety
that he will likely have to continue to suffer Isaac and Timrsquos experiences are more reflective of
somatization or the expression of psychological distress through physical symptoms [69]
These participants highlight the complex comorbidity between musculoskeletal pain and men-
tal health in isolation an inverse experience of physical pain Tyler (white) discussing his sco-
liosis made a direct connection between his untreated pain and his mental health ldquoMental
health and things that go through your head just because of this when you got pain shooting
up into your brain and you guys arenrsquot fixing itrdquo
Pain and anxiety in turn interfered with other aspects of IMU existence Craig (white)
described how an untreated knee injury was causing him ldquomoderate to severe painrdquo in combi-
nation with anxiety about how he would re-enter society when released directly from solitary
confinement together these experiences interfered with his everyday activities including his
ability to communicate with his family ldquoI was in the middle of actually writing my mom a let-
ter and I was going to tell her about you know they still havenrsquot done anything with my
knee I couldnrsquot write the letter anymore I just got so mad I was so mad I really couldnrsquot
even focus on anythingrdquo Craigrsquos medical file affirms his complaint documenting knee swell-
ing and chronic extension tendonitis but also indicating no abnormalities were found
People living in solitary confinement are left with very few options to effectively manage
persistent pain which appears to foster more maladaptive behavior such as rumination stress
and despair within a highly restrictive and stimuli-depleted environment [68ndash71] Along with
bearing the institutional monotony medical precariousness and procedural strictures of soli-
tary confinement onersquos own body becomes a challenge to withstand [72 73]
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 12 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
RacialEthnic disproportionalities
We now turn to reporting the race and ethnic disparities in the Washington state prison popu-
lation overall (compared to the statewide adult population) and in solitary confinement spe-
cifically (compared to the general prison population) These disparities suggest that the
various mechanisms by which solitary confinement impacts health and well-being are likely to
be disproportionately experienced across race and ethnic lines
We analyze administrative data provided by WADOC and Census Bureau population esti-
mates Black non-Latino individuals represented only 37 of adults in Washington state in
2017 but they comprised 179 of the general prison population [74] Similarly Latino indi-
viduals represented 103 of the statewide adult population but 136 of the prison popula-
tion Conversely both White non-Latinos and AsianPacific Islanders Native Americans and
mixed-race individuals (grouped within ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo) were somewhat under-repre-
sented in the general prison population relative to the statewide adult population (see Fig 1)
Differences in racial and ethnic composition of the general prison population and the state-
wide adult population are statistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Within prison walls we find evidence of further racial and ethnic disproportionalities in
housing placement Comparing those housed in restrictive IMU confinement to those housed
in the general population we find that prisoners who self-identify as ldquoLatino Any Racerdquo and
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo ethnicity are over-represented in IMU To characterize the scale of differ-
ences in the racialethnic composition of the IMU and general prison populations we calcu-
lated disproportionality or prevalence ratios as the proportion of each racialethnic group in a
given population divided by the proportion of that racialethnic group in the reference popu-
lation Here Latinos are over-represented within the IMU participant group by a factor of 17
relative to their representation in the general prison population and those grouped in the
ldquoOtherUnknownrdquo category are over-represented in the IMU sample by a factor of 26 relative
to the general prison population Conversely White non-Latino individuals are under-repre-
sented in the IMU sample relative to the general prison population Likewise and in contrast
to the gross disproportionality documented in the general prison population Black non-
Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample relative to the gen-
eral prison population 113 of the IMU sample identified as Black non-Latino compared
with 179 of the general prison population The difference in the racial and ethnic composi-
tion of those in long-term solitary confinement compared with the general population was sta-
tistically significant (p lt 001 chi-square test for homogeneity)
Discussion
A popular analogy likens prison to a chronic illness it disrupts daily life interrupts routines
[72] spreads risk like a contagious disease [75] and models like an epidemiological problem
[76 30] While the study of the physical effects of incarceration has developed over the last
decade there is a serious gap in the literature in understanding the experiences and outcomes
of physical health in isolation We are just beginning to understand the medical correlates of
solitary confinement their comorbidity with mental health and overall implications for pris-
onersrsquo suffering [72] Integrating surveys interviews BPRS scores medical and disciplinary
file reviews and administrative data the scale and array of our research represents one of the
more robust studies of solitary confinement to date [20] The multi-method research presented
here offers a first step not only towards understanding some typical medical problems of soli-
tary confinement but also towards understanding the analytical challenges of an environment
in which physical and psychological problems are immediately concomitant and objective
clarification is often unavailable
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 13 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Fig 1 Racial and ethnic composition of IMU sample general prison population and Washington State 2017 US Census Bureau
Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and
States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun dagger Authorsrsquo calculations The total prison population file included 17943 individuals in
DOC prison custody on July 1 2017 For comparison purposes the ldquogeneral prison populationrdquo excludes those returned to prison on
violations of release or sentence conditions those in an IMU unit on the index date and those on a maximum custody status (n = 1970)
as well as those in the IMU sample (n = 106) Dagger No significant differences in racialethnic composition were found between the IMU
sample and larger IMU population on the index date using raceethnicity data from DOC These data reflect self-reported raceethnicity
during participant interviews ^ OtherUnknown includes individuals of two or more races AsianPacific Islander Native American
Alaska Native and unknown raceethnicity information
httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510g001
We find that solitary confinement constitutes not just a mental but also a physical health
risk It exacerbates well-documented physical health ldquosymptomsrdquo of incarceration from dis-
ruptions of daily life and routines to undiagnosed untreated or mis-treated ailments [1 30
38] These initial symptoms in turn produce other risks to the extent respondents are accu-
rately reporting weight fluctuations in solitary confinement this physical symptom has detri-
mental health implications weight fluctuation itself is associated with adverse cardiovascular
and psychological outcomes [77 78] Likewise musculoskeletal pain increases multimorbidity
and its sequelae are tightly unified in their impact on disability [79]
These health concerns likely have a grossly disparate impact on communities of color just
as incarceration is a health stratifying institution for prisoners their families and communi-
ties so too does solitary confinement appear to exacerbate racial health inequities While we
find that Black non-Latino individuals are moderately under-represented in the IMU sample
relative to the general prison population we find that Latino and OtherMixed Race prisoners
are disproportionately over-represented in solitary confinement in WADOC just as other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 14 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
studies have documented disproportionately high representations of racial and ethnic minori-
ties in other statesrsquo uses of solitary confinement [22 41 43] We further find that prisoners of
all races describe similar physical health challenges and complaints while in solitary confine-
ment In sum people of color face a disproportionate risk of being placed in solitary confine-
ment such racial disparities in turn mean that the physical health symptoms associated with
or possibly caused by these conditions of confinement are likely to fall disproportionately on
certain groups Though we do not explore other risk factors for over-representation in solitary
confinement in this paper we and others have documented serious mental illness [20 80]
transgender identification [81] and pregnant women [82] as particularly vulnerable to both
incarceration and solitary confinement suggesting additional sub-groups who might face dis-
proportionate and unique risks of physical health problems in solitary confinement
If anything the evidence we present here understates the prevalence and intensity of the symp-
toms we document First Washington State is a progressive system actively engaged in both limit-
ing the application and the duration of solitary confinement and developing measures to mitigate
its harmful effects from better mental health training for correctional staff to more sustained
group contact for prisoners in IMUs conditions and their physical effects are undoubtedly
worse in many if not most other states [20 42 44] Second the BPRS somatic concerns scores
we present focus on the two weeks prior to assessment so likely underrepresent the cumulative
incidence of somatic concerns in the study sample over time Third our exceptionally large ran-
dom sample size for an in-depth mixed methods study of a solitary confinement population was
still not powered to establish statistically significant differences between interview subjects in the
IMU in year one (2017) and those out of the IMU in year two (2018)ndashotherwise important com-
parison groups for understanding differences in either somatic concerns measures or physical
symptom specifications Fourth both the Washington state population and state prison popula-
tion have proportionately more white people than some other states and prisons where racial dis-
parities in both prison and solitary confinement may be even more significant
While our findings do not establish either how prevalent the symptoms and mechanisms of
suffering we specified are among people in solitary confinement as compared to the general
prison population or whether solitary confinement in fact directly causes these symptoms
recent research suggests that at least some of the symptoms our respondents reported like
hypertension are significantly associated with long-term isolation [83 45] Although the evi-
dence is clear that solitary confinement poses serious health risks [54 45] our research high-
lights the importance of continuing to document and analyze these risks especially from a
multi-method perspective triangulating administrative population-level data with objective
scales like the BPRS subjective descriptions of experiences from surveys and interviews and
corroboration from medical file reviews
First documenting physical health problems provides a critical means to elucidate the sever-
ity of deprivations in treatment environmental conditions and exercise and nutrition [84 85]
inherent in solitary confinement If incarceration is experienced fundamentally through control
and restriction of the body this is all the more true in solitary confinement where prisoners are
subjected to extreme forms of control while being entirely reliant on others for accessing basic
necessities from food to healthcare Our participants experienced the deprivations of solitary
confinement as exacerbating their health problems which shaped their health experiences as
punitive Otherwise medically trivial conditions quickly become grave in solitary ldquodandruffrdquo
can become a bleeding scalp wound a four-dollar co-payment blurs the difference between sub-
jective palpitations and an unstable arrhythmia and unused muscles ldquorotrdquo Physical suffering
reveals itself to be a crucial dimension of experience in solitary confinement
Second to the extent physical symptoms in particular are more familiar more readily
labeled and less stigmatized than mental health issues they may provide a window into other
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 15 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
less physically tangible pains of confinement in solitary or elsewhere [84 85] The visuality of
spectacular forms of suffering in carceral institutions is only made possible by and through
mundane phenomenon that our participants elucidate through their discussions of everyday
physical experiences [86] Indeed attending to peoplersquos physical health in solitary confinement
reveals the irreducible relationship between the body mental health and highly restrictive
conditions of confinement Whether they exercise to the point of physical debilitation to keep
their minds busy refuse to eat because they do not trust their food is safe or avoid medical
care out of a hopelessness of being treated with dignity the physical and psychological are inti-
mately bounded in peoplersquos experiences in prison Examining physical suffering in solitary
confinement then becomes a tool for understanding suffering in prison more broadly and
especially the comorbidity of physical and mental suffering
Third the challenges we document in identifying and specifying physical symptoms in soli-
tary confinement reveal not just the interrelationship between symptoms conditions and poli-
cies but institutional mechanisms exacerbating both the identification and treatment of
physical problems in prison In many cases our respondents had no hope of establishing what
was physically wrong with them let alone whether the conditions of their confinement caused
the physical ailments because they either could not get or avoided medical treatment While
both community standard and continuity of care is an issue in prison generally [67] solitary
confinement widens these service gaps The phenomenon of dual loyalty which describes how
the patient-provider relationship within prison can be subsumed by correctional directives of
control and mistrust of incarcerated people [67] is acutely relevant in the context of solitary
confinement where both control and mistrust are especially prevalent [87 88]
In sum examining solitary confinement and documenting its affects provides an important
magnifying lens for understanding prison and its affects more broadly not only in elucidating
the mechanisms of harm but also in developing responses to mitigate these harms Ninety-five
percent or more of all prisoners will eventually return home to our communities [4 5] and
many will have spent time in solitary confinement Nearly one-in-five people in prison spends
time in solitary confinement each year and one-in-ten spends 30 days or more in these condi-
tions [3] These numbers will only increase in the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic
which has justified facility-wide ldquolockdownsrdquo imposing restrictions similar to those in soli-
tary-confinement in prisons across the United States as well as actual solitary confinement
placements for infected and exposed prisoners [89] To the extent that solitary confinement
undercuts treatment and care in and beyond prison it undermines the public health of those
incarcerated and those returning to our communities
Supporting information
S1 Text IMU survey
(PDF)
S2 Text Interview instrument
(DOC)
S1 Checklist Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ) 32-item
checklist
(DOCX)
S1 Quotations
(DOCX)
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 16 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
Author Contributions
Conceptualization Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter
Formal analysis Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Methodology Justin D Strong Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca Tublitz
Project administration Justin D Strong
Writing ndash original draft Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Gabriela Gonzalez Rebecca
Tublitz Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie
Pifer Thomas R Blair
Writing ndash review amp editing Justin D Strong Keramet Reiter Dallas Augustine Melissa Bar-
ragan Kelsie Chesnut Pasha Dashtgard Natalie Pifer Thomas R Blair
References
1 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary confinement A systematic critique Crime and Justice
2018 Mar 1 47(1)365ndash416
2 Massoglia M Pridemore WA Incarceration and health Annu Rev Sociol 2015 Aug 14 41291ndash310
httpsdoiorg101146annurev-soc-073014-112326 PMID 30197467
3 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 [Internet] Washington DC US
Department of Justice 2015 [cited 2020 July 14] 1 p Available from httpwwwncjrsgovApp
publicationsabstractaspxID=271350
4 Administrators Association of State Correctional Administrators Yale Law School Arthur Liman Public
Interest Program Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of
prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms New
Haven 2016 Nov [cited 2020 July 14] 106 p Available from httpslawyaleedusitesdefaultfiles
areacenterlimandocumentaimingtoreduceticpdf
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and social justice New York New York Oxford University Press 2011 320 p
6 Haney C Lynch M Regulating prisons of the future A psychological analysis of supermax and solitary
confinement NYU Rev L amp Soc Change 1997 23(4)477ndash570
7 Grassian S Psychiatric effects of solitary confinement Wash UJL amp Polrsquoy 2006 22325ndash84
8 Kupers TA What to do with the survivors Coping with the long-term effects of isolated confinement
Crim Justice Behav 2008 Aug 35(8)1005ndash16
9 Griffin E Breaking menrsquos minds Behavior control and human experimentation at the federal prison in
marion J of Prisoners on Prison 1993 4(2)1ndash8 Formatted Online Version 2006 Available at http
jpporgdocumentsback20issuesJPP_4_2_TEXTpdf
10 Heron W The pathology of boredom Sc Am 1957 Jan 196(1)52ndash57
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12 Guenther L Solitary confinement Social death and its afterlives Minneapolis University of Minnesota
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(8)985ndash1004
15 Grassian S Psychopathological effects of solitary confinement Am J Psychiatry 1983 Nov 140
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16 Grassian S Friedman N Effects of sensory deprivation in psychiatric seclusion and solitary confine-
ment Intl J Law and Psychiatry 1986 Jan 1 8(1)49ndash65
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confinement is associated with post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms among individuals recently
released from prison J of Urban Health 2018 Apr 1 95(2)141ndash48
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 17 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
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effects of administrative segregation [Internet] Colorado Springs Colorado Department of Corrections
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19 Walters GD Checking the Math Do Restrictive Housing and Mental Health Need Add Up to Psycholog-
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Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018 Am J Public
Health 2020 Jan 110(S1)S56ndash62 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2019305375 PMID 31967876
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Sociological Quarterly 1996 Jan 1 37(1)105ndash25
25 Lillie-Blanton M Laveist T Raceethnicity the social environment and health Soc Sci Med 1996 Jul
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26 Western B Punishment and inequality in America New York New York Russell Sage Foundation
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Annu Rev Sociol 1995 Aug 21(1)349ndash86
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org101007s11524-011-9614-1 PMID 21915745
30 Wildeman C Wang EA Mass incarceration public health and widening inequality in the USA Lancet
2017 Apr 8 389(10077)1464ndash74 httpsdoiorg101016S0140-6736(17)30259-3 PMID 28402828
31 Rich JD Wakeman SE Dickman SL Medicine and the epidemic of incarceration in the United States
N Engl J Med 2011 Jun 2 364(22)2081ndash83 httpsdoiorg101056NEJMp1102385 PMID 21631319
32 Baillargeon J Black SA Pulvino J Dunn K The disease profile of Texas prison inmates Ann Epidemiol
2000 Feb 1 10(2)74ndash80 httpsdoiorg101016s1047-2797(99)00033-2 PMID 10691060
33 Solomon L Flynn C Muck K Vertefeuille J Prevalence of HIV syphilis hepatitis B and hepatitis C
among entrants to Maryland correctional facilities J Urban Health 2004 Mar 1 81(1)25ndash37 httpsdoi
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34 Ojikutu BO Srinivasan S Bogart LM Subramanian SV Mayer KH Mass incarceration and the impact
of prison release on HIV diagnoses in the US South PloS one 2018 Jun 11 13(6)e0198258 https
doiorg101371journalpone0198258 PMID 29889837
35 Massoglia M Incarceration as exposure the prison infectious disease and other stress-related ill-
nesses J Health Soc Behav 2008 Mar 49(1)56ndash71 httpsdoiorg101177002214650804900105
PMID 18418985
36 Houle B The effect of incarceration on adult male BMI trajectories USA 1981ndash2006 J Racial Ethn
Health Disparities 2014 Mar 1 1(1)21ndash8 httpsdoiorg101007s40615-013-0003-1 PMID 24812594
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and family history of criminal justice system involvement New York City 2017 Am J Public Health
2020 Mar(0)e1ndash7
39 Fox AD Anderson MR Bartlett G Valverde J MacDonald RF Shapiro LI et al A description of an
urban transitions clinic serving formerly incarcerated persons J Health Care Poor Underserved 2014
Feb 25(1)376ndash82 httpsdoiorg101353hpu20140039 PMID 24509032
40 Nowotny KM Kuptsevych-Timmer A Health and justice framing incarceration as a social determinant
of health for Black men in the United States Sociol Compass 2018 Mar 12(3)e12566
41 Tasca M Turanovic J Examining race and gender disparities in restrictive housing placement Wash-
ing DC (US) National Institute of Justice 2018 21 p Report No 252062
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PLOS ONE The body in isolation
42 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States
Am J Public Health 2015 Jan 105(1)18ndash26 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2014302205 PMID 25393185
43 Schlanger M Prison segregation Symposium introduction and preliminary data on racial disparities
Mich J Race amp L 2012 18(1)241ndash50
44 Reiter KA Parole snitch or die Californiarsquos supermax prisons and prisoners 1997ndash2007 Punishm
Soc 2012 Dec 14(5)530ndash63
45 Williams BA Li A Ahalt C Coxson P Kahn JG Bibbins-Domingo K The cardiovascular health burdens
of solitary confinement J Gen Intern Med 2019 Oct 1 34(10)1977ndash80 httpsdoiorg101007
s11606-019-05103-6 PMID 31228050
46 Dye MH Deprivation importation and prison suicide combined effects of institutional conditions and
inmate composition J Crim Justice 2010 Jul 1 38(4)796ndash806
47 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S Hadler J Lee D Alper H et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-
harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014 Mar 104(3)442ndash7 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH
2013301742 PMID 24521238
48 Lobel J Akil H Law amp neuroscience The case of solitary confinement Daedalus 2018 Oct1 47(4)61ndash75
49 Zigmond MJ Smeyne RJ Use of animals to study the neurobiological effects of isolation In Lobel J
Smith PS editors Solitary confinement Effects practices and pathways toward reform New York
Oxford University Press 2020 [cited 2020 Jul 14] Chapter 13
50 Stahn AC Gunga HC Kohlberg E Gallinat J Dinges DF Kuhn S Brain changes in response to long
Antarctic expeditions N Engl J Med 2019 Dec 5 381(23)2273ndash5 httpsdoiorg101056
NEJMc1904905 PMID 31800997
51 Smith DG Neuroscientists make a case against solitary confinement prolonged social isolation can do
severe long-lasting damage to the brain Scientific American Mind 2018 Nov 9 [cited 2020 Jul 14]
Available from httpswwwscientificamericancomarticleneuroscientists-make-a-case-against-
solitary-confinement
52 Ranapurwala SI Shanahan ME Alexandridis AA Proescholdbell SK Naumann RB Edwards D Jr
et al Opioid overdose mortality among former North Carolina inmates 2000ndash2015 Am J Public Health
2018 Sep 108(9)1207ndash13 httpsdoiorg102105AJPH2018304514 PMID 30024795
53 Wildeman C Andersen LH Solitary confinement placement and post-release mortality risk among for-
merly incarcerated individuals a population-based study Lancet Public Health 2020 Feb 1 5(2)e107ndash
13 httpsdoiorg101016S2468-2667(19)30271-3 PMID 32032555
54 Brinkley-Rubinstein L Sivaraman J Rosen DL Cloud DH Junker G Proescholdbell S et al Associa-
tion of restrictive housing during incarceration with mortality after release JAMA Netw Open 2019 Oct
2 2(10)e1912516 Available from httpsjamanetworkcomjournalsjamanetworkopenarticle-
abstract2752350 httpsdoiorg101001jamanetworkopen201912516 PMID 31584680
55 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional populations in the United States 2016 Washington DC Depart-
ment of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 14 p Report No NCJ
251211
56 Phipps PA Gagliardi GJ Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and ser-
vices Interim Report Olympia WA Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 May 37 p
Report No 03-05-1901
57 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J of Public Health 2005 Oct 95
(10)1692ndash5
58 Peterson M Chaiken J Ebener P Honig P Survey of prison and jail inmates Santa Monica CA The
Rand Corporation 1982 Nov Report No N-1635-NIJ
59 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berke-
ley CA University of California Press 2014
60 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up meth-
ods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs 2009 Sep 70
(5)751ndash61 httpsdoiorg1015288jsad200970751 PMID 19737500
61 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach popula-
tion Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2016 May 17 113(20)5477ndash85
62 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism Isolation
and normalization in Danish prisons Punishment amp Society 2017 20(1) 92ndash112
63 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis Thousand
Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
64 Chun Tie Y Birks M Francis K Grounded theory research A design framework for novice researchers
SAGE open medicine 2019 Jan 71ndash8
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 19 20
PLOS ONE The body in isolation
65 Berzofsky M and Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) Sample Design Evaluation and Rec-
ommendations Washington DC US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017
66 Nwosu BU Maranda L Berry R Colocino B Flores CD Sr Folkman K et al The vitamin D status of
prison inmates PloS one 2014 Mar 5 9(3)e90623 httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0090623
PMID 24598840
67 Pont J Enggist S Stover H Williams B Greifinger R Wolff H Prison health care governance guaran-
teeing clinical independence American journal of public health 2018 Apr 108(4)472ndash6 httpsdoiorg
102105AJPH2017304248 PMID 29470125
68 Brosschot JF Gerin W Thayer JF The perseverative cognition hypothesis A review of worry pro-
longed stress-related physiological activation and health Journal of psychosomatic research 2006
Feb 1 60(2)113ndash24 httpsdoiorg101016jjpsychores200506074 PMID 16439263
69 Stemmet L Roger D Kuntz J Borrill J Ruminating about the past or ruminating about the futuremdash
which has the bigger impact on health An exploratory study Current Psychology 2018 Jan 13 1ndash7
70 Laws B Crewe B Emotion regulation among male prisoners Theoretical Criminology 2016 Nov 20
(4)529ndash47
71 Greer K Walking an emotional tightrope Managing emotions in a womenrsquos prison Symbolic Interac-
tion 2002 Feb 25(1)117ndash39
72 Choudhry K Armstrong D Dregan A Prisons and Embodiment Self-Management Strategies of an
Incarcerated Population Journal of Correctional Health Care 2019 Oct 25(4)338ndash50 httpsdoiorg
1011771078345819880240 PMID 31722608
73 Western B Homeward Life in the year after prison Russell Sage Foundation 2018 May 4
74 US Census Bureau Population Division Annual Estimates of the Resident Population by Sex Age
Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and States April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 2018 Jun
75 Lum K Swarup S Eubank S Hawdon J The contagious nature of imprisonment an agent-based
model to explain racial disparities in incarceration rates Journal of the Royal Society Interface 2014
Sep 6 11(98)20140409
76 Dumont DM Brockmann B Dickman S Alexander N Rich JD Public health and the epidemic of incar-
ceration Annual review of public health 2012 Apr 21 33325ndash39 httpsdoiorg101146annurev-
publhealth-031811-124614 PMID 22224880
77 Zhang Y Hou F Li J Yu H Li L Hu S et al The association between weight fluctuation and all-cause
mortality A systematic review and meta-analysis Medicine 2019 Oct 98(42)
78 Soslashrensen TI Rissanen A Korkeila M Kaprio J Intention to lose weight weight changes and 18-y mor-
tality in overweight individuals without co-morbidities PLoS medicine 2005 Jun 28 2(6)e171 https
doiorg101371journalpmed0020171 PMID 15971946
79 Blyth FM Briggs AM Schneider CH Hoy DG March LM The global burden of musculoskeletal painmdash
where to from here American journal of public health 2019 Jan 01 09(1)35ndash40
80 Patler C Sacha JO Branic N The black box within a black box Solitary confinement practices in a sub-
set of US immigrant detention facilities Journal of Population Research 2018 Dec 354 httpsdoi
org101007s12546-018-9209-8
81 Andasheva F Arenrsquot I a Woman Deconstructing Sex Discrimination and Freeing Transgender Women
from Solitary Confinement FIU L Rev 2016 12117
82 Knittel AK Resolving health disparities for women involved in the criminal justice system North Carolina
medical journal 2019 Nov 01 80(6)363ndash6 httpsdoiorg1018043ncm806363 PMID 31685574
83 Hawkley Test Ashker v Governor of California No 409-cv-05796-CW (ND California 2015)
84 Sexton L Penal subjectivities Developing a theoretical framework for penal consciousness Punish-
ment amp Society 2015 Jan 17(1)114ndash36
85 Crewe B Warr J Bennett P Smith A The emotional geography of prison life Theoretical Criminology
2014 Feb 18(1)56ndash74
86 Corcoran MS Spectacular suffering Transgressive performance in penal activism Theoretical Crimi-
nology 2019 Jan 11 httpsdoiorg1011771362480618819796
87 Glowa-Kollisch S Graves J Dickey N MacDonald R Rosner Z Waters A et al Data- driven human
rights using dual loyalty trainings to promote the care of vulnerable patients in jail Health Hum Rights
2015 Jun 1 17(1)124ndash35
88 Blair TR Reiter KA Letter to the editor and author response Solitary confinement and mental illness
Perspectives 2015 Jul 2
89 Cloud D Augustine D Ahalt C Williams B The ethical use of medical isolationndashnot solitary confine-
mentndashto reduce COVID-19 transmission in correctional settings AMEND 2020 April
PLOS ONE | httpsdoiorg101371journalpone0238510 October 9 2020 20 20
E AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ARTICLE
See next page
112
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
Psychological Distress in Solitary Confinement Symptoms Severity and Prevalence in the United States 2017ndash2018
Keramet Reiter PhD JD Joseph Ventura PhD David Lovell PhD MSW Dallas Augustine MA Melissa Barragan MA Thomas Blair MD MS Kelsie Chesnut MA Pasha Dashtgard MA EdM Gabriela Gonzalez MA Natalie Pifer PhD JD and Justin Strong MA
Objectives To specify symptoms and measure prevalence of psychological distress among incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement
Methods We gathered data via semistructured in-depth interviews Brief Psychiatric
Rating Scale (BPRS) assessments and systematic reviews of medical and disciplinary files for 106 randomly selected people in solitary confinement in the Washington State
Department of Corrections in 2017 We performed 1-year follow-up interviews
and BPRS assessments with 80 of these incarcerated people and we present the
results of our qualitative content analysis and descriptive statistics Results BPRS results showed clinically significant symptoms of depression anxiety or
guilt among half of our research sample Administrative data showed disproportionately
high rates of serious mental illness and self-harming behavior compared with general prison populations Interview content analysis revealed additional symptoms including
social isolation loss of identity and sensory hypersensitivity Conclusions Our coordinated study of rating scale interview and administrative data
illustrates the public health crisis of solitary confinement Because 95 or more of all incarcerated people including those who experienced solitary confinement are even-tually released understanding disproportionate psychopathology matters for de-veloping prevention policies and addressing the unique needs of people who have
experienced solitary confinement an extreme element of mass incarceration (Am J
Public Health 2020110S56ndashS62 doi102105AJPH2019305375)
few procedural protections limited available alternative responses and no external over-sight2 Researchers and policymakers are therefore limited not only in access to data and populations but also by these populationsrsquo fluidity
A standard instrument for assessing psy-chological impacts of incarceration is the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) Originally developed to rate the severity of symptoms in hospitalized psychiatric patients and track changes in status over time1314 the BPRS is increasingly used for research within carceral settings12151617 The current scale assesses 24 observable or self-reported symptoms Extensive research on the BPRSrsquos reliability and validity confirms its efficacy in identify-ing indicators of serious mental illness14
In Washington State interviewers ad-ministered the BPRS to a random sample of 87 incarcerated people during qualitative interviews (and also conducted 122 medical chart reviews)1915 concluding that solitary confinement reveals ldquoa concentration of some of the most important negative effects of the entire prison complexrdquo1(p1692) In a widely cited subsequent study in Colorado the BPRS was included in a battery of tests designed to measure psychological ldquocon-structsrdquo associated with solitary confinement (for 270 matched participants) but generated
Long-term solitary confinement expanded across the United States in the 1980s by
1997 nearly every state had built a ldquosuper-maxrdquo creating an estimated total of 20 000 new solitary cells12 Human rights agencies characterize the practice as torture34 policy analysts criticize it as expensive and ineffec-tive24 Yet the epidemiological basis for understanding solitary confinement is weak Current estimates of the annual US solitary confinement population vary from 80 000 to 250 00056 Likewise the conditions (how much isolation with how few privileges) purposes (discipline protection or institu-tional security) and labels (administrative segregation supermax restrictive housing intensive management) defining solitary confinement are contested256 Many studies document psychological harms of
S56 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al
segregation including associations between solitary confinement and self-harm anxiety depression paranoia and aggression among other symptoms7ndash9 but other recent find-ings suggest that psychological impacts are limited10ndash12 Correctional officials use solitary confinement at their discretion often with
ABOUT THE AUTHORS Keramet Reiter is with the Department of Criminology Law and Society and the School of Law University of California Irvine Joseph Ventura is with the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles David Lovell is with the School of Nursing University of Washington Seattle Dallas Augustine Melissa Barragan Kelsie Chesnut and Gabriela Gonzalez are doctoral candidates in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine Thomas Blair is with the Department of Psychiatry Southern California Permanente Medical Group Downey Pasha Dashtgard is a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological Science University of California Irvine Natalie Pifer is with the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice University of Rhode Island Kingston Justin Strong is a doctoral student in the Department of Criminology Law and Society University of California Irvine
Correspondence should be sent to Keramet Reiter 3373 Social Ecology II Irvine CA 92697 (e-mail reiterkuciedu) Reprints can be ordered at httpwwwajphorg by clicking the ldquoReprintsrdquo link
This article was accepted September 5 2019 doi 102105AJPH2019305375
AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
few reliable results The study relied on a pencil-and-paper test the Brief Symptom Inventory ldquoa 53-item self-report measure to assess a broad range of psychological symptomsrdquo and concluded that people in solitary confinement sometimes experienced improvements in their psychological well-being and those with mental illnesses did not deteriorate over time11(p52)
Our study builds on these investigations relying not only on psychometric instruments but also on mental and physical health and dis-ciplinary records and in-depth interview data to assess the psychological well-being of 106 ran-domly sampled incarcerated people in long-term solitary confinement in the Washington State Department of Corrections (WADOC) from 2017 to 2018 Triangulation of sources gives this study a robust basis for understanding the psy-chological effects of solitary confinement
METHODS WADOC is a midsized (39th highest rate
of incarceration in the United States) fully state-funded correctional system with a long history of inviting academic researchers to independently evaluate carceral practice191819
Fieldwork was conducted over 2 separate 3-week periods in the summers of 2017 and 2018 by a total of 13 research team mem-bers (9 women and 4 men) all affiliated with the University of California Irvine In total 106 incarcerated people were inter-viewed in 2017 and 80 incarcerated people were reinterviewed in 2018 We also collected medical and disciplinary data including serious mental illness (SMI) and self-harm data
Sample and Data Collections WADOC has 5 geographically dispersed
intensive management units (IMUs) people in these all-male units have usually violated an in-prison rule and are in solitary confinement for durations ranging from months to years with highly restricted access to phones radios televisions time out of cell and visitors As a result of WADOC efforts to reform and re-duce IMU use the population in these units fluctuated with a high of more than 600 (in 2011) to a low of 286 incarcerated people (in 2015) on ldquomaximum custodyrdquo status for indeterminate terms contingent on meeting
specific benchmarks20 In 2017 when the initial sample for this research was drawn there were 363 maximum custody status people assigned to the IMU
We selected participants from a randomly ordered list in proportion to the population of each IMU accounting for 29 of the total population in each of the 5 units For recruitment and consent processes see Ap-pendix A (available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg) The interview refusal rate was 39 (67 out of 173 approached) comparable to similar studies of incarcerated people921
The 96-question semistructured interview instrument included a range of questions used in previous studies on incarcerated peoplersquos experiences2223 covering condi-tions of daily life physical and mental health treatment and IMU programming BPRS self-report items were embedded throughout the interview we evaluated observational items immediately following each in-terview24 Interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 3 hours
Following interviews participants were given an option to consent to medical file reviews and to participate in 1-year follow-up interviews All participants consented to rein-terviews and all but 2 participants (n = 104) consented to medical file reviews Following year-1 interviews WADOC provided elec-tronic administrative health and disciplinary files for all 104 consenting participants (along with comparable population-level data for the prison system in 2017)
In summer 2018 the research team returned to Washington and reconsented and reinterviewed every available participant mdashnotably including those no longer housed in the IMUmdashfor a total of 80 reinterviews Because of refusals (n = 4) institutional trans-fers and parole (n = 21) and 1 death we were unable to follow-up with 26 respondents (25) This drop-out rate is low compared with similar studies2526 Follow-up interviews lasted between 45 minutes and 2 hours The condensed year-2 instrument contained ap-proximately 70 questions with variation by current housing status
For the steps taken to protect vulnerable imprisoned research participants and details of the training research team members com-pleted establishing high interrater reliability in administering the BPRS24 see Appendix A
(available as a supplement to the online version of this article at httpwww ajphorg)
Data Analysis All interviews were assigned a randomly
generated identifier digitally recorded transcribed in Microsoft Word (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) translated (1 interview was conducted in Spanish) systematically stripped of identifying details (names dates of birth) and entered into Atlas-ti (ATLASti Scientific Software De-velopment GmbH Berlin Germany) for analysis See Appendix A for an explanation of the thematically grounded open-coding process27 We entered all BPRS paper rating sheets completed following year-1 and year-2 interviews into Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Corporation Redmond WA) We linked each participantrsquos BPRS rating by random identifier to extracted data from qualitative interviews medical file reviews and administrative data from WADOC
Relevant variables extracted from ad-ministrative health data included SMI a critical classification because it implies that treatment is medically necessary and there-fore is an obligation of the prison system while the person is under its care WADOC operationally defines SMI by standardized criteria combining diagnosis medication and frequency of psychiatric encounters and history of suicide attempts or other self-harm
We then imported BPRS and other administrative data into SPSS version 26 (IBM Armonk NY) to generate descriptive statistics including prevalence of clinically significant ratings on BPRS items and factors (subscales of co-occurring symptom groups) including positive symptoms (un-usual thought content hallucinations con-ceptual disorganization) negative symptoms (blunted affect emotional withdrawal motor retardation) depression-anxiety-guilt symptoms (including somatic concerns DAGS) and mania (excitability elevated mood hyperactivity distractibility)14 We ran correlational analyses (cross-tabs and t test) to evaluate the relationships between BPRS ratings and other independent assess-ments of well-being such as existing diagnosis of SMI
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mdash
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RESULTS See Table 1 for summary characteristics of
the all-male participant population (there are
TABLE 1 Characteristics of Sample of People in Solitary Confinement Compared With General Prison Population Washington State Department of Corrections 2017
no women in IMUs in WADOC) and the IMU Population (n = 106) General Population (n = 16 465)a
general WADOC population As in other Age y studies of solitarily confined incarcerated Mean 35 40 people6 our sample was generally younger Median 34 38 more violent (in terms of criminal history) and Range 20ndash65 18ndash94 serving longer sentences than those in the general population Latinos and gang affiliates are both overrepresented in our IMU sample likely because of the salience of conflicts among rival Latino factions as an institutional security concern2 Although our IMU par-ticipants differed from the general prison population there were no significant differences in either demographic variables or criminal history characteristics between our random
Raceethnicity (no)
White
African American
Latino
Other
IMU length of stay
Mean
Median
Range
42 (44)
12 (12)
23 (24)
23 (24)
145 mo
6 mo
lt 1 wkndash151 mo
59 (9746)
18 (2935)
14 (2276)
9 (1508)
sample and the overall IMU population Current offense category (no)
except that our participant pool was slightly Murder and manslaughter 17 (18) 16 (2623)
older than the overall IMU population Sex offenses 12 (13) 19 (3195)
Robbery and assault 57 (60) 34 (5608)
Property offenses 8 (9) 18 (2933) Range and Prevalence of Drugs or other 6 (6) 13 (2106)
Psychological Symptoms Identified Prison convictionsb
Our initial sample of 106 participants had a Mean 5 4 mean BPRS rating of 37 and a median rating Median 4 3 of 33 (possible range from 24 to 168) sug- Range 1ndash18 1ndash27 gesting mild psychiatric symptoms among the study population at the time of our inter-views14 However analysis of individual scale items showed clinically significant ratings (of 4 or higher of a possible 7) for as much as one quarter of the population sampled especially for the depression and anxiety symptoms (Table 2) Further analysis of BPRS factors as opposed to individual items provided
Prison length of stay mo
Mean
Median
Range
Ever in prison gangc (no)
Yes
No
Missing
103
72
3ndash456
60 (64)
36 (38)
4 (4)
97
45
2ndash600
32 (5410)
68 (11 659)
additional evidence of clinically significant Serious mental illnessd (no) 19 (16) 9 (1589)
psychiatric distress in as much as half of the Self-harm attempte (no) 18 (17) Not available population sampled (ie DAGS factor Suicide attempte (no) 22 (22) Not available Table 2)
Administrative data support the finding Note IMU = intensive management unit
of long-term psychological distress Among aGeneral population data excludes 761 categories returned to prison for techn
nonsentenced and 718 resentencical violations of conditions on un
ed incarcerated people Both derlying drug or sex offenses
our respondents 19 had SMI designations a politically selective and narrow set of offenses that would distort the general population primary
22 had a documented suicide attempt and offense profile
18 had documentation of other self-harm bNumber of convictions to prison excluding out-of-state convictions often significant for IMU residents
all at some point during their incarceration cGang status was self-reported Figure is calculated from 102 respondents
ided for 85 respondents figure i
who disclosed this information
either before or during their time in the IMU dSerious mental illness data were prov s calculated from this sample
(Table 1) Moreover respondents with SMI eSelf-harm and suicide data were provided for 94 respondents figure is calculated from this sample
designations were much more likely to re-port positive symptoms and slightly more likely to report all other factored symptoms Qualitative interview data revealed and will be considered exhaustively in sub-than non-SMI respondents (Table 3) These symptoms not otherwise captured by the sequent analyses) Two classes of symptoms
ndentsfindings support the validity of the BPRS BPRS and medical files (Such data will be were reported by a majority of respoassessments used illustratively here for reasons of space descriptions of the severity of the emotional
S58 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
mdash
ndash
mdash
ndash
TABLE 2 Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Symptom and Factor Prevalence Washington State Department of Corrections 2017 2018
IMU 2017 (n = 106) (No) IMU 2018 (n = 28) (No) Non-IMU 2018 (n = 52) (No)
Symptomsa
Depression 2450 (26)
Anxiety 2450 (26)
Somatic concern 1510 (16)
Guilt 1790 (19)
Hostility 1130 (12)
Hallucinations 940 (10)
Excitement 1040 (11)
2500 (7) 1538 (8)
3214 (9) 2885 (15)
2143 (6) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 769 (4)
1786 (5) 1731 (9)
1429 (4) 1154 (6)
1429 (4) 769 (4)
Factorsb
Positive 1600 (17) 1786 (5) 1154 (6) stitution taking over their identity
Negative 470 (5) 0 (0) 192 (1) Irsquove been in the hole so long that it defines the DAGS 4910 (52) 5357 (15) 3654 (19) person If yoursquove been in the box for so long you Mania 1700 (18) 1481 (4) 1731 (9) canrsquot play well with others Wersquore so confined
Note DAGS = depression anxiety guilt and somatization IMU = intensive management unit in that box Itrsquos like a safety blanket (Eli)
mania = elevated memotional withdrawal and motor retarand conceptual disorganization aOnly clinically significant symptoms (raof the sample are presented
ood distractibility motor hyperactivity and excitement dation positive = hallucinations unu
ting of 4 or higher) that were repor
negative = blunted affect sual thought content
ted by 10 or more
Another respondent echoed a frequent complaint about the lack of mirrors con-tributing to the loss of identity
bFactors combine 3
toll of being in the cumulatively the times) and feeling
or 4 different symptoms that are
IMU (80 of respondents topic was mentioned 359 s of social isolation (73
commonly associated
And this quotatiisolation
Yoursquore not around
with one another14
on exemplifies social
people Irsquom around
This IMU has mirrors in the cell The majority of them do not And it gets really stressful when you canrsquot even see your own reflection I mean when you canrsquot even look at yourself you lose some of your self-identity (Eric)
of respondents cmentioned 192 ticerpt exemplifies descriptions
I bet you couldnrsquot the stuff you got tpain Therersquos a lo[and] Irsquove been doadapt to their surrthis life I donrsquot [tpseudonym as wi
TABLE 3 SerioPrevalence Was
Positive
Negative
DAGS
umulatively the t
the ldquoemotional t
walk in my shoes beo endure behind these walls of t you got to go through ing this for 11 years oundings but to get hink] you can (Michth all subsequent qu
us Mental Illness Shington State De
SMI (n
opic was mes) This interview ex-
ollrdquo
cause all
people used to ael a otations)
tatus and 20partment of
= 16) (No
50 (8)
630 (1)
5630 (9)
somebody right noand shackles on like dehumanizing No human being I feel land it does have an while yoursquore sitting
Two additional alent as other clinicitems like anxiety hypersensitivity (16
17 Brief Psychiatric
)
w with handcuffs Irsquom an animal Itrsquos human contact As [a] ike wersquore meant to socialize effect on your mentality in the cell (Chase)
symptoms were as prev-ally significant BPRS references to sensory of respondents
Rating Scale Factor Corrections 2017 2018
Non-SMI (n = 69) (No
1014 (7)
440 (3)
4780 (33)
Comparing Symptoms in and out of Solitary Confinement (2018)
Of the 80 respondents reinterviewed in the second year of this study 28 were in IMU custody and 52 were in the general prison population These 2 subpopulations provide important comparison groups between IMU residents and people in the general popula-tion because all initially entered the study through a random sample of IMU residents These subpopulations also provide a longi-tudinal view of how incarcerated people experience IMU conditions over 1 year and how they recover from these conditions ) as they re-enter the general population In Table 2 we compare cumulatively by sub-population symptom and factor scores in 2017 for IMU residents to 2018 scores for
Mania
Populationa
Note DAGS = deprehyperactivity and excitement negative positive = hallucinatmental illness aMental health data
ssion anxiety guilt
1875 (3)
1880 (16)
= blunted affeht content anions unusual thoug
were available only for 85 of 10
and somatization mania = elevated mct emotional withdrawd conceptual disorgan
13 (9)
8120 (69)
ood distractibility motor al and motor retardation ization SMI = serious
6 sampled incarcerated people
IMU respondents and respondents not in the IMU For respondents still in the IMU in 2018 all clinically significant symptoms that were prevalent among at least 10 of the pop-ulation were at least as prevalent in 2018 and 2 clinically significant factor scores were more prevalent (positive DAGS) For respondents
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mentioned this at least once) and loss of identity (25 of respondents mentioned this at least once) Respondents discussed hy-persensitivity to sounds smells ldquo[and ] tiny thingsrdquo (Giovanni) In particular the sounds of doors opening and closing aggravated many respondents
All you got to do is hold it I mean you donrsquot got to slam it Itrsquos like [correctional officers] showing their power That ainrsquot cool You wouldnrsquot do that in your house would you (Tyler)
Respondents also talked about the in-
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
not in the IMU in 2018 the prevalence of clinically significant symptoms varied from more prevalent than in the 2017 sample (eg anxiety) to less prevalent (eg somatic con-cerns and guilt) and factor scores were either lower (ie positive negative DAGS) or similar (for mania) for respondents not in the IMU in 2018 Despite having an excep-tionally large sample size for a study of a solitary confinement population our study was not powered to establish statistically significant dif-ferences between the 2017 and 2018 data sets
DISCUSSION In this study we combined qualitative
interview data with structured quantitative measures of psychological and psychiatric outcomes in solitary confinement among 106 randomly sampled incarcerated people in Washington State documenting both a wide range and high prevalence of symptoms of psychological distress We highlight 4 major implications of this
First while the overall BPRS ratings we analyzed indicated limited psychological distress as documented in earlier studies1112
a closer examination of specific items and factors revealed that as many as half of re-spondents had at least 1 clinically significant symptom within the BPRS anxietyndashdepression factor Because other studies using the BPRS in solitary confinement settings employed earlier 18-item versions of the scale15 used the scale in combination with other scales11 or analyzed only total ratings12 our findings are not directly comparable with those in other BPRS studies However our findings are consistent with other studies including findings that 20 or more of Washington incarcerated people in solitary exhibited a ldquomarked or severe degree of distressrdquo15(p774) and that more than half of California incarcerated people in soli-tary reported ldquosymptoms of psychological distressrdquo28(p133) Our findings therefore high-light the importance of analyzing specific components of BPRS scores and not only aggregates which mask variation in both prevalence and severity of specific symptoms
Second administrative data confirmed that our participants had relatively high rates of documented mental health problems including rates of SMI and self-harming behavior (Table 1) SMI rates typically
estimated at 10 to 15 of prison pop-ulations829 are measured at 9 in Wash-ingtonrsquos general prison population but 20 in our IMU sample Likewise our qualitative data confirmed that people in solitary con-finement experience symptoms specific to those conditions not captured in standard psychiatric assessment instruments30 Both findings suggest an affirmative answer to the question of whether solitary confinement is associated with more and worse psycho-pathology than general population confine-ment As longitudinal case studies have illustrated930 disproportionate representa-tion of incarcerated people with psychopa-thology in solitary confinement reflects the interaction of clinical and security factors in prison custody decisions solitary confine-ment responds to behavior expressing psy-chopathology often undiagnosed and also aggravates the propensity of some incarcer-ated people to break down or act out31 For these reasons the causal role of solitary confinement is not established by aggre-gate comparisons of IMU and non-IMU populations
Third the comparisons we were able to make across multiple sources of data allowed us to identify a broader range of symptoms of distress than studies that have focused on only 1 or 2 sources of data such as administrative data8 psychiatric assessments11 or qualitative interviews2830 Symptoms such as anxiety and depression were especially prevalent in this population along with symptoms os-tensibly specific to solitary confinement such as sensory hypersensitivity and a perceived loss of identity (as found in other studies exploring solitary-specific symptoms7915283032)
Finally consistent with previous studies1112
we found that the prevalence of psychiatric distress did not significantly increase over time for incarcerated people that either stay or are released from the IMU 1 year later Yet our qualitative data suggest that the BPRS may not be capturing actual psychopathology as re-spondents pointed to psychiatric distressmdashin profoundly existential terms as in the pre-viously mentioned quotations regarding selfhood and identitymdashbeyond the 2-week time period evaluated by the BPRS and outside the scope of the instrument More-over although symptoms were not cumula-tively found to worsen they did persist at high rates for incarcerated people in and out of the
IMU in 1-year follow-up assessments These latter findings are also consistent with other studies underscoring the need for additional research comparing incarcerated peoplersquos ex-periences across different contexts and over time17152832
Limitations Five specific limitations are especially
notable First although our initial sample was relatively large for a solitary confinement population our 1-year follow-up group especially the number of respondents remaining in solitary confinement in the second year was relatively small limiting our ability to establish statistically significant findings about change over time and across contexts from BPRS data Second as our interview results revealed the BPRS does not capture the full spectrum of psychiatric distress incarcerated people experience in solitary confinement Third assessments of psycho-logical well-being would ideally occur at multiple times beyond the 2 we were able to conduct within the constraints of this mul-timethod study Fourth Washington State is not representative of most state prison systems in terms of the prevalence of people with mental illnesses in solitary confinement as WADOC has undertaken reforms in both treatment of mental illness and imposition of solitary confinement over the past 20 years including reforms designed to divert people with serious mental illness to specialized treatment units33 Moreover these reforms have radically improved systematic mental health record-keeping we would expect not only a lower prevalence of psychiatric symp-toms and less deterioration in WADOC in IMUs but also a higher rate of documentation of those symptoms that are present Finally although people in solitary confinement may exhibit distinctive or disproportionately severe psychopathology causal inference regarding the relationship between solitary confinement and psychopathology is beyond the analysis we are able to perform here
Conclusions and Implications We found a wide range and high preva-
lence of symptoms of psychiatric distress in this population including BPRS symptoms associated with anxiety and depression among
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AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
as many as half of our participants adminis-trative indicators of SMI among at least one fifth of our participants and condition-specific symptoms such as feelings of extreme social isolation in well more than half of our participants Moreover these symptoms persisted in the second year for participants in and out of solitary confinement
If we study people in solitary confinement solely with instruments validated with non-incarcerated populations such as the BPRS we may fail to capture the extent of incare-cerated peoplersquos psychological distress A re-spondentrsquos rating on a given symptom may not be ldquohigh enoughrdquo symptoms may not be experienced within the instrumentrsquos desig-nated time frame or the discursive strategies incarcerated people use to articulate their suffering might not correspond with clinical language Moreover past research reveals that incarcerated people develop coping mecha-nisms for solitary1232 and these along with the fact that speaking openly about psycho-logical distress conflicts with institutional norms of self-protection in prison1230 likely contribute to a systematic underreporting of distress These are critical limitations of standardized assessments of incarcerated people whose symptoms may fluctuate sub-stantially in presence and severity during time in solitary1732 Apart from symptoms or their severity this fluctuation itself is an integral aspect of incarcerated peoplersquos psychological distress34 but a need for repeated measure-ment makes it especially difficult to capture
Our findings still point to the importance of using standardized instruments which provide a baseline for assessing and inter-preting the psychological effects of solitary confinement Nonetheless additional sources of evidencemdashinterviews clinician observa-tions staff observations medical filesmdashare crucial for capturing the range of symptoms that people in solitary exhibit and those symptomsrsquo prevalence duration and severity over time Without the benefit of mixed methods and improved instruments re-searchers and policymakers alike will con-tinue not only to lack desired data but also to not know what data we lack Increasing the transparency of both conditions of con-finement and the associated health effects is critical to both question formulation and data gathering
As 5 to 15 of the United Statesrsquo 16 million incarcerated people are held in solitary confinement for at least part of their incar-ceration56 and virtually all of those people will be released all members of society have a vested interest in limiting the induction of psychopathology suggested by findings such as those presented here At least some of the symptoms we described here including identity loss and hypersensitivity resulted directly from specific conditions of confine-ment such as the absence of mirrors and the repetitive slamming of doors To the extent that solitary is meant to make people more manageable its association with psychopa-thology calls into question its usefulness let alone its justice And to the extent that solitary confinement has any causative role in psychopathology our collective goal should be prevention
CONTRIBUTORS K Reiter served as principal investigator on this study led data collection and analysis and conceptualized and led the writing of this article J Ventura trained the study team in applying the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) consulted on data collection and analysis and participated in writing this article D Lovell consulted on study design and data collection led the analysis of administrative data and participated in writing this article D Augustine M Barragan K Chesnut P Dashtgard G Gonzalez N Pifer and J Strong participated in project design participant interviews data analysis and writing of this article K Chesnut also served as project manager and with P Dashtgard participated in administrative data and BPRS analysis T Blair consulted on data analysis and participated in writing this article
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Funding for this research was provided by the Langeloth Foundation
The research presented here utilized a confidential data file from the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) This study would not have been possible without the support of the research and correctional staff in the Washington DOC especially Bernard Warner Dan Pacholke Dick Morgan Jody Becker-Green Steve Sinclair Paige Harrison Vasiliki Georgoulas-Sherry Bruce Gage Ryan Quirk and Tim Thrasher Alyssa Cisneros Emma Conner and Rosa Greenbaum contributed to study design interviewed participants and analyzed data for this project Leida Rojas Elena Amaya and Keely Blissmer helped to clean and organize data Rebecca Tublitz analyzed administrative data Lorna Rhodes served as a project mentor Multiple anonymous reviewers provided detailed critical feedback that improved this piece significantly Finally the incarcerated people who shared their experiences with us made this study possible
Note The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Washington DOC or other data file contributors Any errors are attributable to the authors
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None of the authors have conflicts of interest to declare
HUMAN PARTICIPANT PROTECTION This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Irvine (HS 2016-2816)
REFERENCES 1 Rhodes LA Pathological effects of the supermaximum prison Am J Public Health 200595(10)1692ndash1695
2 Reiter K 237 Pelican Bay Prison and the Rise of Long-Term Solitary Confinement New Haven CT Yale University Press 2016
3 United Nations Solitary confinement should be banned in most cases UN expert says UN News Centre October 18 2011 Available at httpsnewsunorgen story201110392012-solitary-confinement-should-be-banned-most-cases-un-expert-says Accessed October 22 2019
4 Cloud DH Drucker E Browne A Parsons J Public health and solitary confinement in the United States Am J Public Health 2015105(1)18ndash26
5 Association of State Correctional Administrators and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program Yale Law School Aiming to reduce time-in-cell reports from correctional systems on the numbers of prisoners in restricted housing and on the potential of policy changes to bring about reforms Nov 2016 Available at https lawyaleedusitesdefaultfilesareacenterliman documentaimingtoreduceticpdf Accessed April 23 2019
6 Beck AJ Use of restrictive housing in US prisons and jails 2011ndash12 Bureau of Justice Statistics 2015 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfurhuspj1112 pdf Accessed April 23 2019
7 Haney C The psychological effects of solitary con-finement a systematic critique Crime Justice 201847(1) 365ndash416
8 Kaba F Lewis A Glowa-Kollisch S et al Solitary confinement and risk of self-harm among jail inmates Am J Public Health 2014104(3)442ndash447
9 Lovell D Patterns of disturbed behavior in a supermax prison Crim Justice Behav 200835(8)985ndash1004
10 Morgan RD Smith P Labrecque RM et al Quantitative syntheses of the effects of administrative segregation on inmatesrsquo well-being Psychol Public Policy Law 201622(4)439ndash461
11 OrsquoKeefe ML Klebe KJ Metzner J Dvoskin J Fellner J Stucker A A longitudinal study of adminis-trative segregation J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 2013 41(1) 49ndash60
12 Walters GD Checking the math do restrictive housing and mental health need add up to psychologi-cal deterioration Crim Justice Behav 201845(9)1347ndash1362
13 Overall JE Gorham DR The brief psychiatric rating scale Psychol Rep 196210(3)799ndash812
14 Ventura J Nuechterlein KH Subotnik KL Gutkind D Gilbert EA Symptom dimensions in recent-onset schizophrenia and mania a principal components analysis of the 24-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Psychiatry Res 200097(2-3)129ndash135
15 Cloyes KG Lovell D Allen DG Rhodes LA Assessment of psychosocial impairment in super-maximum security unit sample Crim Justice Behav 200633(6)760ndash781
16 Hassan L Birmingham L Harty MA et al Prospective cohort study of mental health during imprisonment Br J Psychiatry 2011198(1)37ndash42
Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1 AJPH Reiter et al Peer Reviewed Research S61
AJPH OPEN-THEMED RESEARCH
17 Senior J Birmingham L Harty MA et al Identifi-cation and management of prisoners with severe psy-chiatric illness by specialist mental health services Psychol Med 201343(7)1511ndash1520
18 Kaeble D Cowhig M Correctional Populations in the United States 2016 Vol 25121 US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018 Available at httpswwwbjsgovcontentpubpdfcpus16pdf Accessed April 23 2019
19 Phipps P Gagliardi G Washingtonrsquos dangerous mentally ill offender law program selection and services interim report Washington State Institute for Public Policy 2003 Available at httpwwwwsippwagov ReportFile836Wsipp_Washingtons-Dangerous-Mentally-Ill-Offender-Law-Program-Selection-and-Services-Interim-Report_Full-Reportpdf Accessed April 23 2019
20 Neyfakh L What do you do with the worst of the worst Slate April 2015 Available at httpsslatecom news-and-politics201504solitary-confinement-in-washington-state-a-surprising-and-effective-reform-of-segregation-practicehtml Accessed April 23 2019
21 Berzofsky M Zimmer S 2018 National Inmate Survey (NIS-4) sample design evaluation and recom-mendations US Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics 2017 Available at httpswwwbjsgov contentpubpdfNIS4DesignRecommendationspdf Accessed April 23 2019
22 Calavita K Jenness V Appealing to Justice Prisoner Grievances Rights and Carceral Logic Berkeley CA University of California Press 2014
23 Reiter K Sexton L Sumner J Theoretical and empirical limits of Scandinavian Exceptionalism isolation and normalization in Danish prisons Punishm Soc 2017 20(1)92ndash112
24 Ventura J Lukoff D Nuechterlein KH Liberman RP Green MF Shaner A Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) expanded version (40) scales anchor points and administration manual Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 19933227ndash244
25 Kleschinsky JH Bosworth LB Nelson SE Walsh EK Shaffer HJ Persistence pays off follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples J Stud Alcohol Drugs 200970(5)751ndash761
26 Western B Braga A Hureau D Sirois C Study re-tention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2016113(20)5477ndash5485
27 Charmaz K Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications 2006
28 Haney C Mental health issues in long-term solitary and ldquosupermaxrdquo confinement Crime Delinq 200349(1) 124ndash156
29 James DJ Glaze LE Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates Washington DC Bureau of Justice Statistics 2006
30 Toch H Adams K Acting Out Maladaptation in Prisons Washington DC American Psychological Asso-ciation 2002
31 Reiter K Blair T Superlative subjects institutional futility and the limits of punishment Berkeley J Criminal Law 201823(2)162ndash193
32 Rhodes L Total Confinement Madness and Reason in a Maximum Security Prison Berkeley CA University of California Press 2004
33 Guy A Locked up and locked down segregation of inmates with mental illness 2015 Disability Rights Washington Available at httpswww disabilityrightswaorgwp-contentuploads201712 LockedUpandLockedDown_September2016pdf Accessed April 23 2019
34 Reiter K Koenig KA Extreme Punishment Compar-ative Studies in Detention Incarceration and Solitary Con-finement New York NY Palgrave MacMillan 2015
S62 Research Peer Reviewed Reiter et al AJPH Supplement 1 2020 Vol 110 No S1
Appendix A Additional Methods Details
Protecting Vulnerable Populations
In adherence to research protocols for vulnerable subjects prisoners participating in this
research were specifically informed that participation was voluntary and would not involve
incentives administrative or otherwise that refusal would not affect them adversely and that all
information shared would be protected and anonymized unless it pertained to ldquoan imminent
security-related threatrdquo To recruit participants a research team member approached each
prisoner at his cell-front explained the study and invited him to interview Willing prisoners
were escorted singly to a confidential area (monitored visually but not aurally by WADOC staff)
consented and interviewed by one or two members of the research team
All identifiable data collected for this project including interview audio recordings
transcripts BPRS score sheets medical file notes and administrative data was stored either in a
locked filing cabinet in a locked office or in a secure server space accessible only through multi-
factor identification to a subset of study team members participating in data cleaning and linking
The University of California IRB approved this study as did the WADOC research department
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Training and Application
At the conclusion of each interview in both year one and year two interviewers
completed ratings for each of the 24 BPRS items For self-report questions interviewers asked
about the presence of symptoms in the previous two weeks per BPRS standard26 The research
team completed 16 hours of in-person structured symptom assessment training sessions with an
expert in BPRS research (co-author Ventura) prior to the year-one interviews and completed
four hours of refresher training prior to the year-two interviews for a total of 20 hours of
training26 Using a set of seven standardized BPRS training videos of patient interviews the
research team viewed and rated each video and discussed their ratings compared to ldquoGold
Standardrdquo training ratings Ratings were analyzed for interrater reliability All research team
members met the minimum standard of an ICC=80 or greater for the BPRS A Quality
Assurance check of symptom assessment reliability was conducted between the study years 2017
and 2018 no major rater drift was found and feedback was provided to the assessment team
when needed to clarify symptom rating guidelines This procedure represents the standard
training protocol for anyone administering the BPRS in clinical settings
Coding Process
To develop our codebook six team members open-coded 24 transcripts (4 each) line-by-
line27 generating an initial list of over 500 codes These codes were further refined and
categorized then condensed into 176 codes organized into 10 code groups After a round of
pilot coding in which each team member completed one initial transcript coding and one re-
coding coding discrepancies were reconciled Team members then coded within code groups of
interest such as ldquoEnduring the IMUrdquo and ldquoIMU Conditionsrdquo Coders met bi-weekly for 6 months
to resolve discrepancies Given this intensive thematically-grounded process no statistics were
calculated for intercoder agreement
WADOC Disclosures
The research presented here utilizes a confidential Data File from the Department of
Corrections (DOC) located within the Washington Department of Corrections The views
expressed here are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the DOC or
other Data File contributors Any errors are attributable to the author(s)